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How Diversity Training Infuriates Men and Fails
How Diversity Training Infuriates Men and Fails
游客
2024-03-07
20
管理
问题
How Diversity Training Infuriates Men and Fails Women
A) American companies dreamed up "diversity training, " typically a course that lasts anywhere from an hour to a couple of days, with the goal of wiping out biases against women and others from underrepresented groups. For most of its history, diversity training has been pretty much a cudgel (短棒), pounding white men into submission with a mix of finger-wagging and guilt-mongering.
B) The first training programs surfaced in the 1950s, after men returned from World War II and were appalled and perplexed to find women in their offices. By the time I entered the workforce in the 1980s, diversity training had taken a backseat too. I don’t recall ever hearing the phrase until the 1990s. By then, it had been reconstituted as a feel-good exercise in consciousness-raising. White men were told they should include women and minorities because it’s the right thing to do. It was all about the importance of "inclusion. "
C) But here’s the thing about diversity training: it doesn’t work. Harvard organizational sociology professor Frank Dobbin and others have since delved into why such programs have failed. Dobbin combed through thousands of data points and found that for white women and black men and women in management positions, it actually made things worse. That’s right: companies that introduced diversity training would actually employ more women and black men today if they had never had diversity training at all.
D) He singled out three situations in which training is doomed to fail: when it’s mandatory; when it so much as mentions the law; or when it is specific to managers, as opposed to being offered to all employees. Unfortunately, he found, about 75% of firms with diversity training programs fall into at least one of those categories. Perhaps more to the point is the fact that the training infuriates the people it’s intended to educate: white men.
E) "Many interpreted the key learning point as having to walk on eggshells around women and minorities—choosing words carefully so as not to offend. Some surmised that it meant white men were villains (导入), still others assumed that they would lose their jobs to minorities and women, while others concluded that women and minorities were simply too sensitive, " some executives noted in a 2008 analysis of diversity training. Training done badly can also damage otherwise cordial relationships. Women and minorities often leave training sessions, thinking their co-workers must be even more biased than they had previously imagined. In a more troubling development, it turns out that telling people about others’ biases can actually heighten their own.
F) Researchers have found that when people believe everybody else is biased, they feel free to be prejudiced themselves. In one study, a group of managers was told that stereotypes are rare, while another group was told that stereotypes are common. Then both groups were asked to evaluate male and female job candidates. The managers who were told that stereotypes are common were more biased against the women. In a similar study, managers didn’t want to hire women and found them unlikable. The evidence is damning.
G) Yet companies continue to invest heavily in diversity training spending, by one estimate, almost $8 billion a year. It has led to what The Economist dubbed "diversity fatigue. In a recent article, the magazine suggested that 12 of the most terrifying words in the English language are I’m from human resources, and I’m here to organize a diversity workshop.
H) Now companies are searching for more effective, less infuriating alternatives. Take tech firms, which have come under fire for being among the worst offenders when it comes to bias. The irony is that they have also been at the forefront of devising new ways to combat it. Can they turn around a culture where sexism has not only been tolerated but in many cases celebrated?
I) I sat down with Brian Welle, director of people, analytics at Google, who is tasked with helping lead the latest trend: unconscious-bias training. We all have prejudices buried so deeply inside of us that we don’t know they exist. Unconscious-bias training is supposed to arm employees with the tools they need to recognize it and neutralize these prejudices.
J) His role, Welle told me, was to ensure that " every decision we made, from hiring to promotion to pay to performance, didn’t have an unintended bias" against women or other underrepresented groups. Welle seized on an insight that has proved to be key for anyone who is trying to wipe out hidden biases; if we believe that everyone around us is trying hard to fight against those stereotypes and prejudices, we’ll do the same. Call it peer pressure, or call it a pack mentality. Whatever it is, it works. Our own biases disappear.
K) Welle and his team ultimately developed a workshop for Google employees that strives to mimic those conditions. In a typical session, he explains the science, so that employees can understand that yes, we’re all biased, and yes, we’re all trying to fight it, and don’t worry, it isn’t your fault. He focuses on four ways to "interrupt" bias, all of which boil down to one word-, awareness. He encourages employees to use consistent criteria to measure success and to rely on data rather than on gut reactions when evaluating others. He urges them to notice how they react to subtle cues. Finally, he encourages employees to call out bias when they see it, even if the culprit (罪魁祸首) is their own boss. To be sure, unconscious-bias training isn’t a cure-all.
L) Google’s seminar is a model that other companies have adopted. In just the past few years, this kind of training has exploded at companies across the country. Almost all of the big tech firms already offer it, including Facebook, Salesforce and VMware, with more joining by the day. By some estimates, 50% of all American corporations will offer unconscious-bias training in the not-too-distant future.
M) Undoubtedly, the popularity of these programs has soared in part because they intentionally don’t cast blame. The appeal of the training is that, unlike old-fashioned diversity training, it’s intended to be guilt-free. However, how much companies talk about equality and inclusiveness matters little compared with how they act. Incentives speak louder than any speeches by the CEO, or bias training workshops, or posters on a wall. For Google, as for others, one key incentive came in the form of family leave. In 2007, Google sweetened its leave policy, extending paid maternity leave to nearly five months, from three. The result was immediate. Attrition rates for women who had babies plunged by 50%.
N) That set off an arms race of sorts, with a growing number of tech firms offering gender-neutral paid parental leave to men as well as women. Netflix and Virgin Management increased paid parental leave to a full year. The practice is now spreading beyond the tech industry to other industries as well. The results of these changes are still unfolding. But they point to a hard truth. For men as well as women, it doesn’t matter how sincere companies are in embracing diversity if their own policies work against it—and in particular if they make it impossible to balance work with family.
O) America lags far behind most industrial countries in this respect. It is the only industrialized country in the world that doesn’t offer paid parental leave. At least 96 other countries offer not only guaranteed maternity leave but paternity leave as well. Without broad policy changes that allow parents in every industry and at every level to have access to affordable health care and child care, the rest doesn’t matter. [br] A pack mentality may enable people to eliminate prejudice unconsciously.
选项
答案
J
解析
由题干中的a pack mentality定位到J段倒数第三句。细节归纳题。J段倒数第三句说“这叫群体心理”,之前的句子解释其含义:如果我们相信我们周围的每个人都在努力与这些成见和偏见作斗争,我们也会这么做。而本段最后一句说,我们自己的偏见消失了。归纳可知,群体心理可以让人们消除偏见,题干中的eliminate prejudice对应原文中的our own biases disappear,故选J。
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