Monday, September 29, 2014

Response To: Exposing Hidden Biases at Google to Improve Diversity

 Unconscious bias is something that is always at play.

Unconscious bias is what makes us decide not to go down the dark street, but rather the well lit one with lots of people. We see this at play on our daily livesnow let's apply the same concept to people.

The results of many researches show that even if men or women have the same things on their resumes, the men will be chosen and hired most of the time.

Now you say they may have randomized this process so that the man and woman had the same chance of getting the job, but if this is the case, then why are 70% of tech workers men?

Google say "they are undertaking a long-term effort to improve these numbers." The first step to recovery is accepting that there is a problem. This does not mean that social media companies are not sexist when choosing who to hire, they are, and at least Google acknowledges it.

Reasoning for not hiring women with the same accomplishments as men may be more discreet within the high society of tech workers, sexism may not be as overt as within lower class workers.

It would be perfectly reasonable for men to be the majority if women were not interested in these jobs, but career choice of women does not correlate to the percentage of which are actually hired. In addition, research shows that "diverse teams can be more creative than homogeneous ones."

According to Daniel Borzelleca from Forbes "the female domination of higher education prevails across all types of schools. It should also be noted that the national male-female ratio for 18-24 year olds is actually 51-49, meaning there are more (traditionally) college-aged males than females."

Nationally there was 1% more men who attend college than women in 2008, but a larger percentage of women graduate than men. Then why are 70% of the workers for Google male when there are a larger percentage of female college graduates?

Unfortunately, sexism is still a large part of our society. As much as we would simply like to wave it off and pretend like it's not there, it is, and we see it in the variation of sexes (or lack of) within companies, not just Google but all tech companies mentioned in the article.

Coincidence? I think not.

4 comments:

  1. I partially agree with your viewpoint. The gender gap in the tech industry might be the effect of not only favoritism for males, but also the lack of women who peruse in engineering. Women only account for 18.4% of the Bachelor's degrees in engineering awarded according to a study done by MIT.

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  2. Interesting to see that there are more female collage graduates than male. On the flipside of this situation, 91 percent of nurses are women according to www.census.gov. I agree with David that it is probable that more men persue jobs in places like Google than women. Instead of focusing on the statistics of one company and applying conclusions from that to all of America, I think we should zoom out to look at the bigger picture. Women do have more rights today than they did fifty years ago. What do most women persue? Men? How many women get rejected compared to men? To prove that there is a bias is more complicated than looking at the statistics of one company.

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