Wednesday, April 15, 2020
Letters of Recommendation Are Biased Against Female Applicants
Letters of Recommendation Are Biased Against Female Applicants The next time you ask for a letter of recommendation, read it carefully: Are you described as âbrilliant,â or âproductive,â âhard-workingâ or âremarkable?â In other words, are you âexcellent,â or merely âgoodâ for the job youâre applying for? Turns out the answer is likely to depend, in part, on whether youâre male or female. A study, âGender Differences in Recommendation Letters for Postdoctoral Fellowships in Geoscience,â published this week in Nature Geoscience, finds women are about half as likely as men to receive âexcellent lettersâ as opposed to âgood lettersâ of recommendation, regardless of whether the person writing the recommendation is male or female. The studyâ"which analyzed the length and tone of more than 1,000 recommendation letters from across the globe for postdoctoral fellowships in the geosciences over a period of five yearsâ"was conducted to determine why just 10% of geoscience professorships are held by women when they comprise 40% of doctoral degree holders. It found that the field has a serious pipeline problem (which, of course, is not just a problem for women in geoscience). In the study, letters were classified as âexcellentâ if they included descriptors like âscientific leader,â âbrilliant scientist,â and âtrailblazer.â The rest, including phrases like âvery productive,â âvery good skill set,â and âvery knowledgeable,â were put into the âgoodâ bucket. About 21% of letters qualified for the âexcellentâ designation, but that included a significant gender difference: 24% of the 862 letters for men fell into that camp, while just 15% of female applicantsâ 362 letters did. Read Next: What You Need to Know About Womenâs Workplace Equality âThese results suggest that women are significantly less likely to receive excellent recommendation letters than their male counterparts at a critical juncture in their career,â the authors report. This isnât the first field thatâs found a discrepancy in letters of rec: A similar study that analyzed the letters for chemistry and biochemistry job applicants found those written for men include significantly more âstandoutâ adjectives, as well as âmore ability words and fewer grindstone words.â Conclusions for studies in physics and medicine were similar. Other studies show that the name on a resume or job applicationâ"in particular whether itâs traditionally a male or female nameâ"also impacts the hiring process. Kuheli Dutt, a social scientist at Columbia University and lead author of the paper told Nature the findings are important because the descriptors indicate to potential employers that women are less competent than menâ"or, at the very least, less âbrilliant.â It doesnât stop at letters of recommendation, though. In 2015, Meg Urry wrote in Nature that gender bias is endemic at every professional level in the sciences. Every major criterion on which scientists are evaluated, for hiring, promotion, talk invitations or prizes, has been shown to be biased in favour of (white) men. These include authorship credit, paper citations, funding, recruitment, mentoring and tenure. For example, although women publish fewer papers than men, there is some evidence that on average they are longer and more complete, and that this difference vanishes if one corrects for funding level and research-group size. While other studies have pointed out the âpipelineâ problem for female employees, they often focus on the loss of female talent due to pregnancy and childbirth. What Nature Geosecienceâs drives home is that itâs not just having children that can impede a womanâs career. Any solutions to the pipeline problem, then, need to go well beyond paid parental leave policies and address the unconscious gender biases of managers and others in positions of power. Video Player is loading.Play VideoPlayMuteCurrent Time 0:00/Duration 0:00Loaded: 0%Stream Type LIVESeek to live, currently playing liveLIVERemaining Time -0:00 SharePlayback Rate1xChaptersChaptersDescriptionsdescriptions off, selectedCaptionscaptions settings, opens captions settings dialogcaptions off, selectedAudio TrackFullscreenThis is a modal window. This video is either unavailable or not supported in this browser Error Code: MEDIA_ERR_SRC_NOT_SUPPORTED Technical details : No compatible source was found for this media. 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