{"title":"Article Commentary: Another challenge worth acknowledging","authors":"Derek R. Avery","doi":"10.1177/237946152000600107","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"I commend Evelyn R. Carter, Ivuoma N. Onyeador, and Neil A. Lewis, Jr., on their thorough, compelling, and thought-provoking article, “Developing & Delivering Effective Anti-Bias Training: Challenges & Recommendations,” which reviewed the challenges that organizations face in using diversity training to develop employee competence at interacting with people who differ from them.1 Although I recognize each of the challenges they present and respect the solutions they offer, I want to address an additional important challenge to developing a workforce that embraces diversity—namely, that organizations are dependent on the labor market to provide prospective employees who possess the knowledge, skills, abilities, and other competencies needed to fulfill job responsibilities, yet too much of the labor force seems to start off with little inclination or skill for interacting constructively with diverse groups. Roughly 20 years have passed since Nancy E. Day and Betty J. Glick published the results of a national assessment detailing the level of employer satisfaction with the diversity-related competency of typical college graduates in the United States.2 They concluded that “HR managers who responded believe that college graduates do not possess the critical skills that are needed to handle diversity” and that “a minority of the organizations surveyed attempt to fill the diversity KSA [knowledge, skills, and abilities] gaps through corporate training.”2 A good deal of anecdotal evidence suggests that these conditions persist today; hence, one could argue that organizations are being forced to do the best they can with the little they have been given.","PeriodicalId":36971,"journal":{"name":"Behavioral Science and Policy","volume":" ","pages":"71 - 73"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2020-04-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Behavioral Science and Policy","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1177/237946152000600107","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"Social Sciences","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
I commend Evelyn R. Carter, Ivuoma N. Onyeador, and Neil A. Lewis, Jr., on their thorough, compelling, and thought-provoking article, “Developing & Delivering Effective Anti-Bias Training: Challenges & Recommendations,” which reviewed the challenges that organizations face in using diversity training to develop employee competence at interacting with people who differ from them.1 Although I recognize each of the challenges they present and respect the solutions they offer, I want to address an additional important challenge to developing a workforce that embraces diversity—namely, that organizations are dependent on the labor market to provide prospective employees who possess the knowledge, skills, abilities, and other competencies needed to fulfill job responsibilities, yet too much of the labor force seems to start off with little inclination or skill for interacting constructively with diverse groups. Roughly 20 years have passed since Nancy E. Day and Betty J. Glick published the results of a national assessment detailing the level of employer satisfaction with the diversity-related competency of typical college graduates in the United States.2 They concluded that “HR managers who responded believe that college graduates do not possess the critical skills that are needed to handle diversity” and that “a minority of the organizations surveyed attempt to fill the diversity KSA [knowledge, skills, and abilities] gaps through corporate training.”2 A good deal of anecdotal evidence suggests that these conditions persist today; hence, one could argue that organizations are being forced to do the best they can with the little they have been given.
我赞扬Evelyn R. Carter, Ivuoma N. Onyeador和Neil A. Lewis, Jr.,他们写了一篇深入、引人注目、发人深省的文章,《发展和提供有效的反偏见培训:挑战和建议》,其中回顾了组织在使用多元化培训来培养员工与不同人群互动能力时所面临的挑战虽然我认识到他们提出的每一个挑战,并尊重他们提供的解决方案,但我想解决一个额外的重要挑战,即发展一支拥抱多样性的劳动力队伍,即组织依赖于劳动力市场提供具有履行工作职责所需的知识、技能、能力和其他胜任能力的潜在员工。然而,太多的劳动力似乎一开始就缺乏与不同群体进行建设性互动的倾向或技能。大约20年前,Nancy E. Day和Betty J. Glick发表了一项全国性的评估结果,详细描述了雇主对美国典型大学毕业生与多样性相关的能力的满意度。2他们得出的结论是,“受访的人力资源经理认为,大学毕业生不具备处理多样性所需的关键技能”,“在接受调查的组织中,只有少数人试图填补多样性知识。技能(和能力)在公司培训中的差距。“大量的轶事证据表明,这些情况今天仍然存在;因此,有人可能会说,组织是被迫用他们得到的很少的东西做到最好。