T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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105.1 | thoughts on differences | CADSYS::PSMITH | foop-shootin', flip city! | Wed May 02 1990 13:18 | 113 |
| This is long, but I've been percolating toward writing this for some
time...
* * *
Feminism and treating others fairly has always been important to me.
I've changed my thinking on HOW to do it over the last 15-20 years...and
I'm aware now that I will probably be changing my thinking on how to do
it for the rest of my life.
When I first started thinking about feminist issues in the early 1970s,
in my early teens, I thought men and women were EXACTLY THE SAME. I
thought society made a mistake and hampered women by not realizing that
we were EXACTLY THE SAME AS MEN and could do EXACTLY THE SAME things
they could in EXACTLY THE SAME way, if only both sexes weren't
socialized differently.
I have gradually changed my thinking on this. I continue to believe
that men and women are EQUALLY VALUABLE, but I now feel that the
differences run deeper than I ever thought before. Both nature and
environment. Physically (in terms of different hormones rampaging
through bloodstreams, different body parts), mentally (women may find
cycles and evolutions a natural way to think of events because we
experience our bodies as cycles and pregnancies as evolutions; men may
find it easy to think of events as being separate instances because
their sexuality is not cyclic in the same way), and socially (men and
women are trained differently). In my opinion, gender identity has a
profound effect on how you feel about yourself and on how you approach
challenges and feelings and thoughts and other people. And -- this is
key -- I DON'T believe that feeling kinship with a gender group is an
inherently bad thing; nor do I think that recognizing general style
differences of different gender groups is a bad thing, providing (of
course) that everyone is ALWAYS conscious that individual variations are
everywhere and can cross gender group identities at any time, any place,
for anyone. I explicitly no longer believe that it is evil to recognize
and acknowledge that men and women are different in how they approach
problems; I now feel that instead of insisting that we be THE SAME, that
we EQUALLY VALUE different approaches. And that we allow people to
cross boundaries where they wish ...
Valuing Differences (male/female) and Valuing Diversity (race/culture)
workshops have been helpful to me in hearing other perspectives and
experiences and coming to understand that other people have different
priorities than I do. I found it particularly helpful for me to attend
one workshop as the "subordinate culture" (women) and one workshop as
the "dominant culture" (whites). I can see as a subordinate how easy it
is for the dominant group "not to see" a problem that is a problem for
me but not for them ... and I can see as a dominant how hard it is to
accept that although I am not necessarily *individually* responsible for
creating individual problems for individual people, I *am* a member of a
dominant culture and am therefore responsible as a member of that
culture for the domination it practices. Taking responsibility is NOT
"feeling guilty"; it is accepting facts and moving on from there.
One insight that hit home in the male/female workshop for me was that
I've always approached feminism thinking that I am the all-knowing
expert and that men have to "give up" being so obsessed by power. The
counter-insight is that men can GAIN emotional connectedness and I can
GAIN a sense of importance and power. This can be win-win if we
approach it right.
One insight that hit home in the race/culture workshop for me was that I
don't think enough about being "white" and how American culture is a
predominantly European white culture. My heritage and my culture are
the same -- white. Other groups have to juggle their heritage and the
prevailing culture. Furthermore, as a woman, I find it VERY EASY to
identify with feelings of oppression ("gee, I know what you mean, yes,
isn't it terrible when this kind of thing happens, how can THEY do this
to US"), which is all very nice but which is in some ways a method of
denying the reality that I AM A MEMBER of the group that is dominant; a
method of pretending that I'm still a responsibility-free subordinant.
* * *
A personal vision
Music to me provides an analogy that I find helpful in thinking about
what I want to see in a society that values people equally but
acknowledges that we are not all the same and should not all be the
same; and that the existence of subgroups can add to the richness of the
overall society.
In most singing groups, there are four voice parts (Soprano, Alto,
Tenor, Bass). I sing the Soprano melody part, the top part. The melody
is beautiful; I am vaguely conscious that I am the "star" and that most
people hear me and that the other harmony parts support my melody line.
However, I have also sung other voice parts that are NOT the melody. My
mother sang the melody all her life and when she got older, she moved
to the Alto harmony part. She was *stunned* to realize that Altos DON'T
think of their part as "harmony supporting the sopranos"; they think of
their part as a DIFFERENT MELODY. Altos can be as oblivious to the
Sopranos as Sopranos are to them...
A Soprano does not usually sing notes in the Alto range, although they
overlap. An Alto does not usually sing notes in the Bass range,
although they may sing in parallel. A Bass harmony part must be sung in
a different way than a Soprano melody part. Altos, Tenors, and Basses
are not expected to sing their parts in the exact same way as the
Sopranos sing their part. Individual people have different talents and
different voice ranges; by grouping them into distinct subgroups,
beautiful sounds can happen.
A melody line is beautiful. Gregorian chant and plainsong are
beautiful. But the addition of harmony makes for a richer sound that
combines in unexpected ways. It is more than just "one part melody plus
three parts harmony" -- each part sings its own melody in its own way IN
COOPERATION with the other parts, co-creating an integrated experience.
That's what I want out of our society: acknowledgement of differences,
and working with differences to create a richer and fuller experience
than a single melody line can achieve alone.
|
105.2 | | ULTRA::ZURKO | My life is in transition | Wed May 02 1990 13:57 | 12 |
| > I don't think enough about being "white" and how American culture is a
> predominantly European white culture.
This rang bells with me. I often (always?) mind-f**k myself (see the Illuminati
triology) along diversity lines, but I don't think I've gotten to the white
European part of me. I've been working on the religion-as-culture lines. It's
an easy one to do; it comes up every December :-). It actually occurs much more
often, but sensitizing myself is so hard. But, since I have exposure to folks
who practice/don't practice various religions, it's a _lot_ easier than working
on the European white. Sometimes WITCH lectures help there; there was a great
one around Columbus Day last year.
Mez
|
105.3 | European Culture in America ? | SHIRE::BIZE | La femme est l'avenir de l'homme | Thu May 03 1990 08:15 | 17 |
|
Though I found answer .1 absolutely beautiful, I am a bit puzzled by
the allusion to "European-white" culture in America (replies .1 & .2).
To me, being conscious of my "European-white-judeo-christian" heritage
makes sense BECAUSE I live in Europe, and as such belong to the "powers
that be". I don't really understand the point of coming from a European
culture when in America - after all, a European is just one kind of
immigrant, and as such does not belong to the power system. And I am a
bit doubtful that a 3rd, 4th or Xth generation American is still bathed
in European culture...
Would somebody care to expand? Should that be a separate topic? I
realize I havent't given any useful input on the basenote, but that is
something I need to think through before I can say something relevant.
Joana
|
105.4 | Yep | CROW::KELTZ | You can't push a rope | Thu May 03 1990 10:06 | 33 |
| Joana,
Here's my cut. The US is not truly a melting pot and never really has
been -- a stew maybe, but not a melting pot. The country was settled
in waves of immigration. Each wave met with resistance and bigotry
from the population which was established at the time it arrived.
Eventually it assimilated to some degree or other and became a part
of the bigotry against the next wave.
"To some degree or other" has historically depended on a several
factors:
a) how long it has been since your wave arrived (all things settle in
eventually, one hopes)
b) how many came in the next wave (immigrants historically have put up
with lower wages and worse working conditions than established
citizens, hence are seen as an economic threat. And nothing gets
you "in" as fast as having a new common enemy.)
c) how similar your wave was to the entrenched powers-that-be in the
settled population (white Protestant Western Europeans have the
longest history of empowered status in this country)
d) whether your wave arrived here of their own volition as free
immigrants searching equal citizenship, or whether they were
"recruited"/coerced/kidnapped into coming here as slaves, servants,
or cheap manual labor. (In addition to the national disgrace of
what white America did to African people, many Asians, Irish and
Eastern European immigrants fell into this category.)
The *power* structure of this country is still in the hands of the
descendents of white judeo-Christian Europeans -- and Northern
Europeans at that. So is most of the wealth and most of "high
society". It's changing, but it's LONG overdue.
Beth
|
105.5 | who's a minority? | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Thu May 03 1990 14:05 | 11 |
| I think "Judeo-Christian" is a term invented strictly by Christians!
I'm not sure why, either. Those of us who are Jewish certainly don't
feel like part of the majority most of the time most places in the US.
Like, grumbling about using up precious vacation days for religious
holidays that we spend sitting in the synogogue, or fighting "blue
laws" so we can shop on weekends without shopping on our sabbath, or
trying to explain to people that we can't attend their luncheon
because they scheduled it during Passover. Diversity encompasses more
than skin color: not everyone who looks like a WASP is one.
/Charlotte
|
105.6 | everyone's a minority | TOKNOW::METCALFE | Eschew Obfuscatory Monikers | Thu May 03 1990 15:14 | 33 |
| > I think "Judeo-Christian" is a term invented strictly by Christians!
> I'm not sure why, either.
^^^
I think it perhaps was invented by Christians, but I don't know for sure.
It refers, though, first to Jesus being a Jew, our (being a WASP) link to
Judaism.
The Laws of Judaism were set into principles by Christ, which represented
a departure from the Jewish tradition. (Since then, Christians have
failed by developing traditions they hold as tenaciously as laws, which is
very unfortunate.) Not to leave a dangling thread, the principles I speak of
had Christ relate hatred to murder, lust to adultery, coveting and envy
to stealing - what "comes out of the heart" - the attitude instead of the
act.
As for minority status, any group can become a minority in today's American
society (though admittedly there are propensities), provided other
minority groups band together under some umbrella. For example, Jews are
in the minority to the Christian religions in this country, but single
out a brand of Protestantism, or better Christian versus non-Christian,
the demigraphics can change dramtically.
Disclaimer: I do not know the ratio of those who claim to be in the
Christian or non-Christian categories, nor the breakdown of Protestant
denominations in America as it relates to the population. I feel I am
safe to say that there are fewer Jews than [professing] Christians in
America and that the Catholic church is perhaps the largest [single] religious
organization in America (but that collectively, Protestants outnumber Catholics
in America).
Enough rambling.
Mark
|
105.7 | more from workshops | CADSYS::PSMITH | foop-shootin', flip city! | Fri May 04 1990 12:25 | 73 |
| About the "European-white" thing, .4 put it perfectly! There's a
concept of "Northern-European-white == default" in our overall culture.
For instance, my last name is Smith -- I've never had to wonder if the
reason for not getting a callback on my resume was because my name was
Garcia or Liu. (I've had to worry if being female has "cost" me
opportunities or changed how someone interacted with me, though.)
I'd like to encourage people to use this topic creatively -- feel free
to talk about insights you've had, or personal experiences, or
workshops, or how it's hard to be one person at home and another person
at work...
BTW, the group that has run the two valuing differences workshop I've
participated in is called New Dynamics, Inc. They are a cooperatively
run partnership with branches in NYC, New Hampshire, and Portland, OR.
We are supposed to maintain confidentiality, so I can't talk about any
events or other people's personal experiences, but I think it would be
OK to talk about insights and techniques gained from the experience...
One concept they present is that the goal is to work away from a
dominant/subordinant way of interacting that forces people to act out
roles society forces us to use. Dominants and subordinants collude
with each other, in different ways (men/women, white/color, etc.).
New Dynamics doesn't focus on how this all started, but rather on
showing possible paths toward working together well.
o The thing that's the same in different kinds of discrimination is
that it usually involves a power differential, and that it involves
stereotyping one group negatively and stereotyping one group
positively. Techniques to maintain the power differential are
usually based on the power differential, and therefore are similar
across groups.
o The thing that's different is WHAT is discriminated about, and the
nature of the relationship between the dominants and subordinants.
(Men and women must interact more closely than whites and people
of color are forced to; men/women issues are therefore easier to
grapple with because we all know at least one man and at least one
woman, whereas there are many whites in America who have never
talked for longer than 5 minutes with someone who is not white.)
To change this, we have to have a GOAL: learning how to negotiate as
equals and colleagues. Learning to see that others are different in
ways you never dreamed. Learning to listen. Learning to learn.
The hard thing is that you can't wake up one day and be perfect.
(Rats!!) You have to slowly evolve; and during that process you deal
with people who are farther behind than you and people who are ahead of
you. And you can't ever really say that you are always perfect --
something may happen to toss you way back into the worst part of the
old way of interacting...
The Valuing Differences seminars have been really helpful to me in
terms of a) spending real time at work thinking about how to work
toward colleagueship, and b) coming up with different frameworks for
deciding what the problems are and ways to deal with them, and c)
seeing other people (on the _opposite_ sides of the power equations)
who are also interested in learning and sharing and changing.
I've found it inspiring and fun at times and frustrating and hard
at times.
Has anyone else been to any Valuing Differences or Valuing Diversity
workshops? What did you think? (If it was negative, you probably
should NOT identify the outside organization that ran the workshop...)
What did you learn? Did you think people were really participating, or
did you think they were looking for a "vacation from real work"?
Are men afraid they'll get "beat up" for being male?
Are whites afraid they'll get "beat up" for being white?
Pam
|
105.8 | | PACKER::WHARTON | Sapodilla gal... | Wed May 09 1990 19:21 | 40 |
| re .7
Pam,
I attended a cultural diversity workshop a few months ago. It was led
by the New Dynamics team. Two things things struck me during and even
after the workshop.
I've always known that I'm black. I don't wake up in the morning and
think "black." Yet by the time I make it to the end of any given day
of interaction with people (interaction does not have to be in person
either, often it is through the media, etc.) I realize I'm black. So,
I had (and still have) a very difficult time fathoming the "phenomena"
of whites not realizing or owning up to being white. My reaction was
obvious disbelief and shock. "How can you sit there and tell me that
you aren't really white??!!"
I was also amazed at the propensity toward groupings such as Italian,
German, Irish, to avoid acknowledging whiteness.
Based on the feedback I had from many of the other minorities at the
workshop, my shock and disbelief seem rather common. My opinion is, if
there is any first step whites must make before difference can really
be valued is to own up to being white. White, white, white. Not
"Northern-European" or other buzzwords.
The other thing which struck me was the difference between the way
minorities communicated with each other in the presence of whites and
in absence of whites. (By minorities I mean non-whites.) It was like
day and night. I was literally brought to tears when the vast
difference was pointed out. I can only imagine with sadness how much
business affected on a day to day basic by the communication problem.
Since attending the workshop I have made a special attempt to "be
myself" here at work. So far the attempt hasn't been met with oh too
much success though. I try. But sometimes the urge to conform to the
dominants' rules is so strong. Conforming is so much easier for both
involved parties, least of all me.
_karen
|
105.9 | on being the default | CADSYS::PSMITH | foop-shootin', flip city! | Wed May 09 1990 23:19 | 56 |
| re: .8 Karen,
It's hard for me to realize that it's hard for me to realize, if you know
what I mean! Being "the default" means that you are not faced with
having to WORK at conforming to the default. And, to tie this into
this conference a bit, it makes it easier for me to see where it might
be hard for men to realize they are the default in relation to women.
An analogy might help. I'm born and bred in the U.S., where the driver
sits in the left seat. I drive a car from the left-hand seat. I do
not think about it, ever! Not when I walk to my car, not while I'm
driving, not when I get out of the car. It's Reality to me, that cars
are all driven from the left side.
Someone who was born and bred in England, where everything's opposite
and drivers sit on the right, might have a hard time adjusting --
really adjusting -- to driving in the U.S. They might occasionally
head automatically for the right-side car door. While making a right
turn, they might instinctively check both directions. In any case,
they would always be conscious at some level that they were really a
right-side driver who has to adjust to drive on the left side.
So that's one reason why it's easy, really easy, for whites in a
predominantly white society NOT TO SEE or be conscious of BEING WHITE.
We don't have to. Similarly, it's easy, really easy, for men in a
predominantly male-oriented society NOT TO SEE or be conscious of BEING
MEN.
The key, I guess, is cross-cultural shock. Have a left-side driver
visit the U.K. and try driving on the right side...
About your other point, yes... It's hard to know what to do. I was
flipping channels last week and I caught part of a standup comedy show
on BET (Black Entertainment Television). I love standup comedy. I
watched for a while, and something about it was really pulling at me.
I couldn't think what it was. Then I realized that I was watching a
completely black audience who were enjoying black standup comedians.
Part of me felt like a voyeur, but I saw a side of black culture I am
rarely able to glimpse -- relaxed, free, trusting, trading subtle
in-jokes, open. It made me realize how much just my presence in a room
can change what happens in that room.
It also made me remember how trusting and open all-women groups can be.
One comment made at the men/woman workshop I attended was made by a
man, after watching the women talking in the center of the circle. He
said, "I'd never seen that side of women before -- the ENERGY you all
have together!"
If only we could all -- men, women, blacks, whites, asians, etc. --
come up with ways to unleash the energy that is locked away by the
pressures of society! I think the Valuing Diversity workshops are a
step in the right direction. At least one becomes aware that the
energy exists, and one becomes absorbed with the process of finding the
keys.
Pam
|
105.10 | I think we all make too much of colour | CVG::THOMPSON | My friends call me Alfred | Thu May 10 1990 11:26 | 16 |
| > Based on the feedback I had from many of the other minorities at the
> workshop, my shock and disbelief seem rather common. My opinion is, if
> there is any first step whites must make before difference can really
> be valued is to own up to being white. White, white, white. Not
> "Northern-European" or other buzzwords.
Why? Why must I be white rather than Northern-European or just plain
mixed bag American? Black and white are macro differences. Beyond that
there are micro differences. There appear to be as many differences
between blacks from West Indian families and blacks from families that
have been in the US for 100s of years are there are between whites
from the same situations. The color of my skin and your skin are only
one part of who and what we are. I have more in common with some
black people then I do many (perhaps most) white people.
Alfred
|
105.11 | | LYRIC::BOBBITT | we washed our hearts with laughter | Thu May 10 1990 11:43 | 12 |
| Okay. So I'm white. Does it make a difference in how I treat others?
Yes.
I think I err on the side of overconcern. I'm so careful when speaking
to "people of difference" (cultural, racial, sexual) sometimes that I
feel like I'm being hyper-aware and oversensitive to them. I go
overboard the wrong way sometimes, in trying to make up for my lack of
difference I probably come across as a total twit. I'm trying to
chill out though.
-Jody
|
105.12 | | CLUSTA::KELTZ | You can't push a rope | Thu May 10 1990 12:49 | 36 |
| re .8
Karen, I think you're right. This feels silly to say, but I never
realized how much my life has been affected by the fact that I'm white
until I spent a couple of days in a place where being white is not an
asset -- where, in fact, it can be a limitation. I think I never really
knew I was "white" before; until then I was just "normal people".
It took something under 48 hours to make a difference. There were
things missing I had never realized were there before. Like being
confident that I'd be welcome in any business establishment I cared
to step into. Like expecting that people would behave as though I had
just as much right to be there as anyone else -- even if some of them
might be rude to me. Surely these are things that *just people* all
have, right?
It made me *angry* to be missing these things that I honestly thought
all people have. I hated having to admit that they may very well be
life attributes of being a WHITE person, not just A person, even in
this day, in this country. It brought home the ugliness of racism in
a way that had never been real before.
It also made me ashamed, for in the midst of my reaction was an element
of my own racism I DID NOT want to face. Part of my anger was not
simply "how dare they treat a person this way?" Part of it was "How
dare they not treat white as naturally on or with the top of the heap?"
God, I wish I'd never had to acknowledge that thought as my own.
All I can say is, I'm sorry. I never knew this was there, honest. I'm
glad I had the experience. I know it doesn't tell me what it's like
to live as a non-white person in this society day by day, but it's
enough of a taste to at least make me question how much of my reality
is not reality for all people.
Maybe it's a step in the right direction, anyway.
Beth
|
105.13 | very disorienting! | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Thu May 10 1990 14:15 | 30 |
| It is definitely strange to find yourself somewhere where people like
you are not present in the numbers you are used to - like suddenly
being the majority when you aren't used to that, or not seeing anyone
else who looks remotely like you when your normal life has you in the
majority.
I found it very disconcerting, and very odd. Late last fall, I was on
vacation in a very remote area: the island of Yap (yes, as in "stone
money") in western Micronesia (going there had been a longtime dream of
mine, and I finally managed to get there!!). One afternoon, Paul and I
hired a car and driver/translator, and made our way to the northern end
of Ma'ap island, where we walked in and visited some of the villages,
to take photographs and to see the local culture (Yap is the most
culturally "pure" of the easily-accessible Micronesian islands; sailing
off to a *really* remote island wasn't in the budget). Very few
visitors visit these people, and only a really tiny number of
Americans. Now, there is no way that I could pass for Micronesia: I am
just under six feet tall, with long straight blond hair, and since I
sunburn easily I am real careful to never tan. Most Yapese people do
not like to have their pictures taken, but one older woman, who was
wearing traditional dress (grass skirt only) allowed us to take her
picture with her face averted, and greeted us very politely in a
language other than Yapese - Japanese! Since the Japanese had held
these islands when she was a child, she had learned that language, and
assumed that since we were obviously not local people, why, we *must*
be Japanese.... That *really* felt strange! I suppose I look
somewhat closer to Japanese than to Micronesian, maybe, but this
incident certainly gave me an odd feeling!
/Charlotte
|
105.14 | Can be disturbing. | STAR::MACKAY | C'est la vie! | Thu May 10 1990 14:55 | 9 |
|
It is not too difficult for "whites" to experience being
the minority if there is a good-size chineatown near you. Just spend
half a day there and you'll get this strange uncomfortable feeling
of being different. It is worth the experience, it may not be pleasant
though.
Eva.
|
105.15 | It's scary | OTOU01::BUCKLAND | and things were going so well... | Thu May 10 1990 15:48 | 10 |
| I am white and my wife is Burmese and I met her many years ago when in
Burma on business.
We would occasionally go out together to a movie. It was an eye
opening experience to be in the minority and to be the object of
prejudice. A situation that I had not known before, nor generally
since. It was also scary. Needless to say we tended to visit
friends rather than go out in public.
Bob
|
105.16 | | STAR::MACKAY | C'est la vie! | Thu May 10 1990 16:50 | 26 |
|
I'd never really considered myself different and thus haven't
paid much attention to racial prejudice (against me) until
I have a family. I am Oriental, but because of my westernized upbringing
I don't fit the stereotype. My husband is white, so my kid is
mixed. It is amazing how strangers will stare at us in public.
It is also amazing how some people think I am Cambodian or
Vietnamese (read refugee and poor). It shocked them to find out that
I came from an upper class Chinese family, who actually "married
down" to a middle class white male.
I started to feel like I am the ambassador of my race - my job
is to break the stereotype, to teach the public that not all
Asian immigrants are on welfare and that a lot of them were
aristocrats in their native lands. It is a burden, a self-inflicted
burden, maybe.
One way I think that will improve people's understanding on
different culture is to incorporate the material in school,
teach that as part of geography. Geography is being taught in all grades
all over the world, except in the United States. It is a shame.
It is much easier to "convert" a kid than an adult.
A better understanding of foreign culture will definitely help
us with international trade and foreign policies.
Eva.
|
105.17 | | BSS::BLAZEK | dance the ghost with me | Thu May 10 1990 17:07 | 20 |
|
> I started to feel like I am the ambassador of my race - my job
> is to break the stereotype, to teach the public that not all
> Asian immigrants are on welfare and that a lot of them were
> aristocrats in their native lands. It is a burden, a self-inflicted
> burden, maybe.
Eva, you really hit on something here. I, too, feel like an ambassador
when attempting to enlighten my "difference" to someone who has little,
if any, experience encountering my difference. Oftentimes I exert a lot
of energy in explaining certain fundamentals and/or why's and wherefore's
to the people who haven't had the opportunity to expand their awareness
that not everything is as everything seems and that to conveniently use
stereotypes and assumptions is wrong.
Self-inflicted, yes, but I know I derive great satisfaction when I *do*
manage to provide some truthful information where none had been before.
Carla
|
105.18 | Somehow, Chinatown doesn't count for me | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Thu May 10 1990 17:37 | 3 |
| That's odd, but I never feel "unusual" in Chinatown - even when I was
in Hong Kong. I guess I am used to that situation - especially since
both of us love Chinese food.
|
105.19 | Just some ramblig thoughts | CGVAX2::CONNELL | Trepanation, I need it like a hole in the head | Thu May 10 1990 18:01 | 18 |
| I admit that I have never had to undergo the extreme prejudices that
minorities have had to face. I do try to think of myself as Human as
opposed to white or Irish/English/Scotch-French Canadian/Indian. My
problem, and it is MY problem, is in trying to be sensitive to problems
faced by other races, sexual preferences, (I'm hetero) or any other
"difference". Over the past 30 years or so, antiprejudice has almost
been beaten into whites by the media and laws. So much so that in my
case I think I lean to much the other way in trying to be sensitive to
the issues in my day to day dealings with minorities in the work place.
I'm almost afraid to say anything beyond what is needed to get the job
done for fear of offending someone. I realize the laws were needed to
get things to the point that they are now, which I think is much better
then they were 25-30 years ago. I just wonder how many more of us are
overly sensitized about treatment of minorities when we knew all of the
prejudices were inherently wrong to begin with.
Phil
|
105.20 | Guilt | USCTR2::DONOVAN | cutsie phrase or words of wisdom | Fri May 11 1990 03:22 | 20 |
| I remember in the 70's when I was a kid (Yes, I know I'm old.) watching
60 minutes and seeing white, adult Bostonians yelling at 2nd grade
black students on the bus,"Nigger go home". This was national T.V. I
was a white Bostonian. I was so embarassed and ashamed that I cried.
How could I allow this to happen? I carried that guilt inside of me
for years.
I remember being in high school in the mid 70's when a German woman
came in to talk to us about what it was like to be raised in post
WWII Germany. She spoke of the same shame, the same guilt but for the
Jews.
I have since learned to feel empathy as opposed to sympathy. I see
things more clearly and don't take things personally. But, it now
bothers me when people try to force upon me the sins of my for-
fathers who really weren't of my lineage at all because my Grand-
parents were all from Europe and came here and suffered prejudice
as well.
Kate
|
105.21 | confusion | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | do you have a brochure? | Fri May 11 1990 10:11 | 61 |
| From the time I can remember my parents told me that racial prejudice
is one of the greatest evils in the world, and that I should never
pre-judge anyone because of their skin color, national origin or
religion, and that I should always remember that everyone is an
individual. I just accepted it as being the right way to view things.
But, in reality, I grew up in a small, rural, Massachusetts town
where everyone was white and either protestant or Catholic, so although
I was raised to hold these views I never had occasion to practice
them.
In 1968, at the age of 18, I enlisted in the Women's Army Corps,
and in basic training, for the first time in my life, I had the
opportunity to interact with "girls" (we did call ourselves girls,
not women, so I still think of us, back then, in the WACS, as being
girls) of different backgrounds. In my first platoon alone there
were a lot of black girls, a Jewish girl from New Jersey (there
were no Jewish people in my hometown that I knew of), a Chinese
girl, and a Native American girl who had grown up on a reservation.
I found it fascinating to meet people of different backgrounds,
but I can remember asking myself, How should I act so these people
will know that I'm not a racist and that I know they're equal?
Well, when I was a little kid I was afraid of boys, and when I got
older I decided I wanted to become friends with boys, and had also
wondered how to treat boys! So, I decided to treat them just like
I treated girls, as though I had never noticed there was a difference,
and it seemed to work because since then I have always had a lot
of male friends. (although I admit at some point I do treat attractive
males differently) So, I decided, in the Army, that the only thing
I could figure out to do, was to act like I hadn't noticed there
were any differences between any of us. Since I didn't know how
to treat men or how to treat black people or any other group different
from me, I decided to treat everyone as though they were white women,
or girls, or the way I had always treated other white women and
girls. For the most part it *seems* to have worked. Of course,
I have never held a management position so I haven't had to deal
with that angle, but it seems to have worked in my personal life
and at work.
I remember one instance back in the Wacs, in 1968, that made me
feel really good at the time. As background, I hated the Wacs and
wanted to get out so I tried to deliberately do things wrong so
that I would get thrown-out. (Eventually I succeeded) Anyway,
one day I didn't "fall in" to go to the mess hall, hoping that I
would be considered AWOL, and two other white girls decided that
they didn't want me to do that because it would make the platoon
look bad. So, they picked me up and began dragging me down the
stairs. I was struggling and yelling but they were both a lot bigger
than me. A sergeant broke it up and told me to get in line. Anyway,
the point is that a black friend, Viola, told me to get in line
in front of her. I did and then started to cry. Viola said, "Don't
let those honkies see you cry!" I said, "Honkies? Viola, I'm white,
too!" And she said, "Yeah? Well, you ain't like them! I know
that! You're like me! You know it's whats inside a person that
counts, not the color of their skin." It made me feel really good
when she said that because she and I had never discussed the subject
of racism and I felt I must've been doing something right if she
felt that way about me. Also, it was back in 1968 and we were only
18.
Lorna
|
105.22 | | STAR::MACKAY | C'est la vie! | Fri May 11 1990 10:22 | 22 |
|
I think what "most" minorities want is to be treated like a human.
They don't want favors, they don't want special privileges or
attention. What they don't want is people making judgement based
on their appearance or their last names.
Some people are shocked to see an Oriental
with a Scottish last name - they thought someone made a mistake
somewhere. (This happened to me at numerous places, like take-out
restaurants, dry cleaners, even at DEC when I was looking for a
printout in the lab).
Some guy asked me in the grocery store if I was making chop-suey
that night. I wasn't sure if he was trying to be friendly or
what, I almost felt embrassed. I didn't know what to say.
I didn't ask for that attention! Just leave me alone, Bob.
I think this is a difficult situation, it is hard for everyone
to know what the right thing is.
Eva.
|
105.23 | | STAR::MACKAY | C'est la vie! | Fri May 11 1990 10:40 | 19 |
|
re. 21
I use the same approach!
I went to a Catholic all girl school for 12 years. When I got to
college, I didn't know how to treat guys. So, I just treated them
the way I treated girls. Some guys were taken back initially,
they didn't expect a girl to be so "open" and "equal". But, that
strategy worked for me all these years. Some of my best friends are
guys. Now, I am one of the few female engineers in the group, I
have to enjoy working with guys, for my own sanity sake!
As far as dealing with people of other race, well, I don't even
see them as "different" - they are just people from different backgrounds
and with different experiences. How can I put my husband in the
"white" batch and my child in the "mixed" batch??!!
Eva.
|
105.24 | one I can support | CSC32::HADDOCK | All Irk and No Pay | Fri May 11 1990 10:57 | 9 |
| I really liked the comment of the first black astronaught (his name
escpes me at the moment). There was quite a media hubub when he was
to be the first black man to go into space. Someone asked him how
he felt about being the first black astronaught to go up in the
space shuttle. His answer was that the day he was looking forward to
was the day when a black, a jew, an hispanic, a woman, an oriental,
and a white man all went up in the same shuttle--and nobody gave a *&^t.
fred();
|
105.25 | | NUPE::HAMPTON | NEW DAD!!!!! | Fri May 11 1990 13:21 | 5 |
| re -1
First black astronaut was Col. Guion (sp?) Bluford.
-Hamp
|
105.26 | | PACKER::WHARTON | Sapodilla gal... | Fri May 11 1990 15:46 | 18 |
| re .10
Alfred,
The way the cookie crumbles makes much of color. I would be naive at
best to pretend otherwise.
You must be white because you *are* white and have benefited over the
years from being white. It would be part of the healing process, if
there is such a thing, for you to acknowledge the part you and your
whiteness plays in the scheme of things. You can not begin to value me
when you can't recognize that you are white and the ramifications that
may have.
You may have many things in common with blacks. What are some of the
things you do not have in common with blacks, Alfred?
_karen
|
105.27 | valuing of differences begins at home | YGREN::JOHNSTON | bean sidhe | Fri May 11 1990 17:23 | 28 |
| re.8 & 26
Well, I certainly know I'm white. I know I went to private schools. I know
that, for most of my life, being born of a certain class gave me enormous
advantages. I know that for all of my life I have been and will be white
and that gives me advantages as well.
There was a time when my family was the only white family on their street. I
knew that 'the white girl' was me, although I truly preferred to be called
Annie. While no one treated be shabbily, I had to pay extra close attention
in order to keep up and I often said or asked dumb stuff because of my
difference. Sometimes the other kids very kindly made allowances for me.
I didn't like that _a_lot!_ because I've always prided myself on being able
to compete without a 'handicap' as it were. I make no claim to a complete
understanding, but it was educational.
I'm not ashamed to be white, but I find more value in being Irish. I don't
see it as a form of denial, because being Irish generally is an indication that
a person is white. It's not a buzzword to me. It's a reminder of some of the
differences that I have from the great amorphous 'white' and these differences
are precious to me.
And beyond being white, upper-class, and Irish there are the differences that
make me Annie. These are more important still.
I can value persons because I value myself.
Ann
|
105.28 | "A Class Divided" film -- 1 hour | CADSYS::PSMITH | foop-shootin', flip city! | Thu Jun 07 1990 11:57 | 31 |
| I saw a really good film at lunch yesterday onsite. It was "A Class
Divided." See it !!!!!
A third-grade teacher in Iowa in 1968 was filmed putting her kids (from
a small all-white community) through a two-day exercise in experiencing
prejudice first-hand. (Don't try this at home!)
The kids knew all the right things to *say* about racism being bad, but
they didn't understand what it was about. So she divided them up into
blue-eyes and brown-eyes. One day blue-eyes were on top, one day
brown-eyes were on top. She commented how horrifyingly easy it was to
turn a nice cooperative group of 3rd graders into little bigots ... in
15 minutes. And over something so obviously stupid.
They brought the class together 15 years later to see how the exercise
had affected them in the next segment of the film, and the final
segment showed a similar exercise used on prison staff to sensitise
them to discrimination and the internal pressures it creates.
One of the key things I got out of it was seeing how discrimination is
like an invisible drag on you. It's not only the obvious, visible
blocks (things like preferential treatment, sexual harassment, pay
inequity, <top-group-only> jobs or seating or clubs) that are the
problem -- a lot is how you start to doubt yourself, and how you have
to fight to keep self-respect when everyone around you doubts you. It
takes a lot of effort.
The film is mostly geared toward racial prejudice, but I saw lots of
parallels with sexism.
Pam
|
105.29 | | FSHQA2::AWASKOM | | Thu Jun 07 1990 16:54 | 9 |
| Pam -
Do you remember (and can you post) any of what the long-term effects
had been? I'd really like to know and probably won't have a chance
to see the film.
Thanks.
Alison
|
105.30 | fuzzy on details | CADSYS::PSMITH | foop-shootin', flip city! | Fri Jun 08 1990 21:53 | 39 |
| Hi Alison,
One bit of data was that in following years they tested the kids two
weeks before, the two days of, and two weeks after the exercise on
spelling, grammar, etc. The first two weeks established a baseline.
During "bottom dog" day, children scored lowest; during "top dog" day,
children scored highest. The two weeks after the exercise, though,
children scored a statistically significant amount higher than the
baseline. The results were analyzed (at Cornell, I think), and the
psychologists there said it was a totally inexplicable 24-hour
turnaround in measurable intelligence.
My theory would be that they suddenly had it demonstrated for them that
outside messages about worth aren't always true -- that you have to
listen to your own inside messages.
Fifteen years later, the former 3rd graders remembered what it had felt
like. They commented that they felt like the class was an extended
family, partly due to this experience. (The teacher hypothesized that
they had learned how to hurt each other, and had learned that it felt
better *not* to hurt each other, fwiw.) It affected their choice of
spouses, friends, and affected how they raised their children. One
husband said he KNEW how strongly his wife felt about racism and that
if he wanted to marry her he would have to be the same way. Another
husband said he was in the army, and had worried about whether his wife
would be able to "handle having to interact" with people of other races
and cultures -- he found out she had gone through this exercise and
realized she had had strong innoculation against tendencies to
discriminate and stereotype.
For me, that part of the film didn't have the same impact as the 3rd
graders and the prison wardens, because it was a discussion *about* the
experience, rather than watching people *going through* the actual
experience.
It should be available through site libraries, btw...hope you do get to
see it!
Pam
|
105.31 | one more thing... | CADSYS::PSMITH | foop-shootin', flip city! | Fri Jun 08 1990 22:01 | 10 |
| One kid in particular had been "a little Nazi" when he was top dog, and
the teacher commented that she had gone home that night hating him and
his attitude. She asked him why he had acted like that.
He said that he had really enjoyed the feeling of freedom to do what he
wanted, and it was a way to get back at "life". He could say mean
things and get away with it because the bottom dog group was less
important.
Pam
|
105.32 | | FSHQA1::AWASKOM | | Mon Jun 11 1990 11:12 | 5 |
| Pam -
Thank you. Interesting stuff.
Alison
|
105.33 | | LEZAH::QUIRIY | Christine | Mon Jun 11 1990 16:06 | 8 |
|
That program has been shown on public teevee; I believe it's an NPR
product. (It may have been originally broadcast as one of the
Frontline reports.) Perhaps it can be found at video rental places?
It _is_ an excellent documentary. (The teacher was wonderful with
the adult class, too.)
Cq
|
105.34 | Did anyone personally see this? | JUPTR::SMITH | Passionate committment/reasoned faith | Mon Jun 11 1990 16:20 | 14 |
| I also *heard* that it was re-created on Oprah; i.e., that an expert
was giving "evidence" as to why blue-eyed people were smarter, etc.,
than brown-eyed people. Result: callers (and some brown-eyed people
in the audience) began to *believe* the "expert." Even some who stuck
with it till the end of the show and learned that it was all a
hoax/demonstration/whatever found it hard to shake their newly-acquired
prejudice.
Now, I did not personally see the show, so I cannot substantiate
whether Oprah did have such a show; but if she did, I have a problem
with that -- what about folks who *didn't* stay tuned for the whole
thing and who *believed* the "evidence?"
Nancy
|
105.35 | | ATSE::FLAHERTY | Nothing is by chance! | Mon Jun 11 1990 17:39 | 6 |
| Oprah did recreate the scenerio - the tape is used in the Valuing
Differences workshop in Merrimack and therefore may be available in
the library. The experience was eye-opening.
Ro
|
105.36 | Compelling Business Reasons for Valuing Differences | BATRI::MARCUS | Think! Let your mind go, let yourself be free... | Fri Apr 05 1991 12:36 | 437 |
| Though it's been a while since the last posting, I though this memo would be of
interest - especially under current conditions.
Barb
From: ISLNDS::COLLINS_M "04-Apr-1991 1352" 4-APR-1991 13:59:46.45
To: @FYI.;@LDR.TEAM;@VOD.COMMITTEE;
CC: COLLINS_M
Subj: FYI: OLD, BUT TOO IMPORTANT TO NOT RESEND: COMPELING REASONS FOR VD
(forwards deleted)
Subject: COMPELLING BUSINESS REASONS FOR VALUING DIFFERENCE
Subject: Compelling Business Reasons for Valuing Differences
+---------------------------+ TM
| | | | | | | |
| d | i | g | i | t | a | l | I N T E R O F F I C E M E M O
| | | | | | | |
+---------------------------+
TO: TaN Advisory Board DATE: 28 August 1990
FROM: Peter Hurley
DEPT: Distributed Processing Eng.
DTN: 226-5273
LOC/MS: LKG2-2/Z07
NODE: DELNI::HURLEY
SUBJECT: Compelling Business Reasons for Valuing Differences
Introduction
The future success and growth of our business depends on increased
productivity. To achieve higher productivity, we need to encourage and
reward teamwork and collaborative efforts. The Valuing Differences
program expands your repertoire of management skills to improve
productivity and teamwork in a diverse and complex working environment.
It's become clear that
o The old model for managing projects doesn't work anymore.
- Projects have become extremely complex.
- Everyone has complex interdependencies.
- Productivity is actually declining.
o Budgets are being reduced, yet productivity expectations are higher.
o We have a diverse and complex work force composed of more than 50
percent women and minorities.
o Employees of the 1990s have different expectations about
- Their work and the workplace
- Dependent care responsibilities
- Cultural behaviors
- Patterns of communications
This paper describes a number of recurring business situations in which
Valuing Differences can help to unleash the talents and contributions of
people attuned to different work styles, patterns of communications, and
approaches to problem solving.
COMPELLING BUSINESS REASONS FOR VALUING DIFFERENCES
Digital's engineering organization faces its greatest challenge since
the company was founded. The engineering style that has served us well
for thirty years, and is at the heart of the Digital culture, is
starting to fail at producing timely, competitive products. Three
significant shifts in the work environment have rendered our engineering
style inadequate to meet the needs of the 1990s. These shifts are:
o A significant increase in product complexity
o Budget reductions accompanied by increasing workloads
o A shift in the demographics of available work-force candidates
The business problems resulting from these environmental shifts are what
the Valuing Differences program is aimed at solving.
I. Significant Increase in Product Complexity
Nearly all of our projects are an order-of-magnitude more complex now
than they were ten years ago. Some examples of this are DECnet/OSI,
DECmcc, Alpha, DCE, NAS, ALL-IN-1 Phase 2, TP, and FDDI. Large, complex
projects are a result of the maturing of the industry. Today's customers
demand complete and well-integrated solutions to real problems.
Solution: Collaborative Development
A. Teamwork
Most of our key projects are too complex for the old style of development,
where one or two individual contributors working independently could
complete an entire project. Our current projects frequently have dozens
of participants working in multiple groups, often in different
organizations at different sites. For such projects to be completed
successfully, the following must occur:
o Work and responsibilities must be delegated to the various teams.
o Good communications must be established between individual team
members and between the teams themselves.
o Collaborative work styles must be developed across the project. As
managers, we must learn to recognize and reward good collaborative
behaviors when they happen, in order to reinforce this work style.
B. Everyone is successful or no one is
In a complex project, if one group fails, the whole project fails.
However, some managers prefer to blame a group for any problems
encountered during a project instead of trying to help the group solve
the problems. This counterproductive management style often causes the
group to hold back bad news out of fear of being blamed or punished.
Even if the bad news does get expressed, managers often don't provide
help or support, which reinforces the behavior of not reporting bad news.
Such a work environment hides any remaining problems, leaving them to be
discovered, one by one, after all chances for providing help are lost.
Changing to a management style that promotes collaborative thinking and
that values and rewards the identification and resolution of problems
will improve the work environment.
C. Learn to listen
The key to collaborative development is learning to listen. In our
traditional engineering culture, if engineers believed that they had a
good idea for a new product or feature, they just implemented it. We must
move away from this hit-or-miss approach by listening better:
o First, to our customers, to determine what is needed.
o Next, to the sales and marketing people, to determine what they need
to sell or market the products.
o Next, to the other people and groups involved in the development
process, to understand their capabilities and limitations. This is
especially important during periods of limited staffing. Many projects
have failed because we didn't listen to the developers when they said
that there was too much work to be done in the time allotted.
o Finally, we must learn to listen to ALL of the people on the project.
Too often, we hear only the loud or aggressive people (this includes
the power-hungry managers who like to dominate the discussions). By
doing this, we exclude people who have just as much (or more)
knowledge of the project and who can offer new perspectives and ideas.
D. The "hero" model no longer works
The increasing complexity of our projects forces us to recognize that it
is no longer possible for one person to design, architect, or understand
every aspect of a project. To cope with this complexity, the following
must occur:
o Projects must be divided into components.
o Responsibility must be truly delegated.
o Good communications, cooperation, and coordination must occur within
and between the component teams.
An article in the May-June 1987 issue of the Harvard Business Review,
"Entrepreneurship reconsidered: the team as hero," by Robert B. Reich,
summarizes a different reason why the hero model no longer works:
The "Big Ideas" created by American entrepreneurs are quickly borrowed by
other countries, where collaborative teams make a series of incremental
improvements faster than the original entrepreneur can respond, thereby
taking over the bulk of the volume revenues. Since we frequently don't
compete at producing the lowest-cost products, we must learn to play to
our creative and innovative strengths. By developing "collective
entrepreneurship" within our development teams, we can remain ahead.
Complex projects require a shift to a collaborative working style. We
must move away from the competitive, intergroup "win-lose" mentality
that, by definition, requires some number of losers for every winner.
We must strive for and reward "win-win" attitudes that maximize our
productivity. A major goal of the Valuing Differences program is to
teach and implement these positive collaborative development techniques.
II. Budget Reductions Accompanied by Increasing Workloads
We are entering a period of limited budget growth. It is likely that
our engineering headcount will remain flat for several years. However,
workloads are increasing, our products are becoming more sophisticated
and complex, and more skills are required to build these new products.
Solution: Value our employees and maximize their productivity
A. Achieve higher productivity by keeping employees longer
The increasing complexity of our projects extends the training and
start-up time for new employees. It is clear that productivity will
improve if our committed employees stay longer. Both the group and the
employees can thereby benefit and grow from the employees' accrual of
valuable knowledge and expertise.
B. Long-term employees achieve higher potential
A recent study revealed that a high percentage of our consulting
engineers came to Digital as first-level engineers directly from college.
By making Digital a place where people want to stay and build a long-term
career, we can reap the benefits of their skills at the peak of their
careers. In other words, we don't spend the effort and money training and
developing engineers just to have them leave when they become valuable
contributors.
C. Avoid the hiring costs and hassles
It is hard enough (and it is getting harder) to hire people to meet our
growth goals. If this is accompanied by a high turnover rate among our
employees, meeting hiring plans often becomes impossible. By creating an
environment where employees choose to stay for the long term, we can
minimize the hiring costs and the disruptions of introducing new people
into development teams.
D. Fill the "hard-to-fill" positions
The best way to fill such "hard-to-fill" positions as project leaders,
supervisors, or architects is to develop and promote people from within
the organization. The longer people want to stay in an organization, the
easier it will be to fill these important positions.
E. Valuing Differences attracts good people
It has been demonstrated that groups with a good reputation for
Valuing Differences attract more and better-qualified candidates. There
are a number of cases where senior talented people, especially women and
minority candidates, have actively sought employment with groups that
have good Valuing Differences attitudes and behaviors and, conversely,
have left groups that have poor Valuing Differences attitudes and
behaviors.
F. Make it possible for our employees to stay and work
At certain times during a person's career, it may become desirable or
necessary to work fewer hours per week or to work at shifted hours. This
may occur because of events such as maternity or paternity leaves; caring
of children or infirmed elders, or both; or personal illness. It is
important to support our employees through such times by offering
o Flex time
o Part time
o Core time
o Personal leaves of absence
o Day-care facilities
o Benefits packages that are available to part-time workers
The time that employees need to work through their personal events is
actually a small fraction of their careers. In addition, experienced
employees who decide to work part time for a year or two are frequently
more productive than new hires who must be trained and must accrue
experience before becoming fully productive. It makes excellent business
sense to support our employees through their difficult personal times,
because it makes excellent business sense to keep our valuable,
well-trained, productive employees with us for the long term.
III. Shift in Demographics of Available Work-Force Candidates
Current studies indicate that over 70 percent of the external candidates
applying for jobs with us in the year 2000 will be women or minorities.
However, Digital's traditional management styles and success metrics are
not optimal to deal with the changing demographics of the work force.
Solution: Expand our management skills to include multiple
successful styles.
A. Greater diversity means more inventiveness and robustness
Heterogeneous work groups have proved to be three times more inventive
than homogeneous work groups. By achieving and maintaining diversity in
our work groups, we will produce products that are more robust, more
differentiated, and more successful than those of our competitors.
B. Supporting a diverse work force makes it easier to hire good people
If job candidates see that they can fit in comfortably and that their
culture and work styles are valued and supported, they will be more
likely to accept our job offers.
C. Gain higher productivity by supporting multiple successful styles
Not everyone works well in the individualistic, competitive, and
confrontational style that is frequently associated with white males. To
force everyone to conform to such a style as the only way to advance
their careers actually lowers productivity. There are other successful
work styles, such as collaborative development, that are more comfortable
for certain people. Managers can increase productivity by learning to
support and value these other successful work styles.
Currently, the Digital culture supports only one model for success. In
this model, it is the loud, aggressive, interruptive, and frequently
obnoxious individuals who get heard. This model is reinforced by the
reward system. First, there is no penalty for such behavior. Second, to
get promoted, one must be heard or "visible," which encourages the loud,
aggressive, interruptive style. If we are to maximize our productivity,
we must learn to reward other models for success, such as collaborative
development.
D. Reward all successes
As the demographics of the work force change, the methods of developing
and delivering successful products will also change. Managers must
recognize and reward all successes, especially by including the new
models for success. The current reward and promotion system still favors
the old "hero" model. We must move to a system where people are measured
on, and rewarded for, their individual contributions and their ability to
work collaboratively with the rest of the project team in a way that
increases the synergy within the group.
E. Eliminate outdated management behaviors
There are a number of management styles that used to be acceptable but are
now limiting our movement toward a collaborative environment. For example,
limiting hiring searches to old friends or to people in one's immediate
purview excludes potentially better candidates from the wider community.
Frequently, managers only hire people who have similar styles, share
similar viewpoints, or have similar job histories. The danger with this
behavior is that it may insulate the group from learning new concepts and
devising better ways to work. To broaden their groups, managers should
post job openings widely and actively seek diversity and people who can
bring new ideas and viewpoints.
Next, we must go beyond just having "token" minorities or women in
positions of leadership. Having one or two persons of difference on a
staff or a project usually does not bring about the desired positive
changes that come from having diversity. There must be enough people of
difference on a staff or project to provide each other with the necessary
support and credibility to make substantive changes and contributions.
Another outdated behavior is to raise issues to a manager higher up in
the organization before trying to resolve them directly with the people
doing the work. This behavior puts up walls between groups, lowers the
effectiveness and timeliness of communications, and inhibits the
organization's ability to react quickly when problems arise. As the work
force shifts toward diversity and collaboration, our management styles
must also shift to support the change. Otherwise, our productivity and
organizational stability will diminish.
[The following article appeared in a recent issue of DIGITAL REVIEW. It
clearly shows that our Valuing Differences initiative is being recognized
as valuable and good business sense.]
PLACING A VALUE ON DIFFERENCES
Lois Slavin, Senior Editor
DIGITAL REVIEW - July 9, 1990
------------------------------
DEC's slogan for DECworld '90 is "Innovation That Works." But this
slogan doesn't apply only to DECworld. The concept applies to many
different aspects of DEC. Innovation comes into play when connecting
computers to computers, linking human beings to each other and
interacting with customers. Other companies would do well to follow
DEC's example. In fact, books such as Peters and Waterman's "In Search
of Excellence" and Kanter's "The Changemasters" use DEC as an example of
an enlightened corporation.
DEC's laudable strategy for managing personnel and conducting business
is called Valuing Differences. According to this philosophy it is
imperative that managers realize people are different and manage them
because of - not in spite of - their differences. Managers are trained
to direct heterogeneous employee environments and are measured by how
well they do so. DEC's multivendor computing strategy - helping
dissimilar computing systems work together - bears a strong resemblance
to Valuing Differences.
During the Valuing Differences training program, managers learn to
understand people from all walks of life. They become sensitized to
people who are ethnically diverse, come from different work backgrounds
and cultures, are physically handicapped, practice alternative
lifestyles and so forth.
Managers are taught to look at their own view of the world, enlarge it,
and see the power that their words and actions have in motivating and
managing employees. In doing so, they can adjust their behavior to
maximize the effectiveness of the whole department - whether it be
product design and development, manufacturing, marketing or sales.
It's probably no coincidence that DEC developed its networking strategy
and its Valuing Differences philosophy at about the same time in the
mid-1980s. It's probably also no coincidence that, at the time, both
DEC's internal corporate slogan and its DECworld '85 slogan was "Making
It All Work Together."
Today, Valuing Difference is in evidence both within DEC and in the
manner in which the company conducts business with its customers. Of
course, we don't live in an ideal world and everyone isn't always
satisfied. But DEC does have a corporate charter to accept customers -
and employees - the way they are.
Valuing Differences means integrating all kinds of environments so that
people and computers work together effectively. This is truly
"Innovation That Works."
|
105.37 | anyone know where the Valuing Differences banner is? | RUTLND::RMAXFIELD | | Thu Jun 06 1991 13:44 | 10 |
| If anyone has knowledge of the whereabouts of the Valuing
Differences banner "Digital values all its employees"
please send me mail to this account. We're trying to
get a contingent for the Pride March, and would like
the banner by Saturday.
Thanks in advance,
Richard
dtn 289-1609
|
105.38 | looking for a real-life situation as a "for-example" | RYKO::NANCYB | client surfer | Thu Oct 17 1991 19:58 | 27 |
| Synopsis from a journal available in the MLO library:
_Put Diversity in Context_ by Anna Everest and Jim Kennedy
Personnel Journal v.70, n.9 Sept 1991 pp. 50-54
To remain competitive, it will be necessary for employers not
only to embrace diversity, but to seek out all available
strategies that will bring them the talent they need in the
coming years. One such strategy is to understand our own
cultural filters and to accept differences in people, so that
each person is valued as a unique individual during the
recruitment process. Edward T. Hall, a cultural anthropologist,
has studied cultures around the world and has developed a concept
that may be very helpful in communicating with employees from
diverse backgrounds.
This is the concept of high- and low- context cultures. High-
context cultures are more sensitive to the surrounding
circumstances or context of an event. Although no culture exists
exclusively at either end of the context scale, some cultures,
such as the Asian, Hispanic, and African-American, are high-
context; others, such as Northern European, are low context
cultures.
The significance of this model is that most of the new people
coming into our work force are high-context, yet most members of
management are medium/low-context."
|
105.39 | Any Ideas? | MCIS1::DHURLEY | Children Learn What They Live | Wed Oct 30 1991 10:23 | 17 |
| The Greater Marlboro Area Valuing Diversity Committee is looking for
ideas on a "Winter Celebration"....a couple of suggestions are:
1. Culturally....what are your traditions and would you be willing
to share those traditions with others....
2. Another idea is that of sharing desserts.....these would be
ethnic desserts...
I am very interested in any other ideas that anyone would have....
Please contact me....
thanks,
denise
|