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Why are Diversity Initiatives Important Census Canada 2001

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Canada Toronto Why are Diversity Initiatives Important Census Canada 2001 Total 29,639,030 4,647,955 Visible Minorities 3,983,845 13% 1,712,530 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Why are Diversity Initiatives Important Census Canada 2001


1
Why are Diversity Initiatives ImportantCensus
Canada 2001
2
Diversity Initiatives in the Workplace
  • Negative inter group relations in workplace still
    prevalent
  • E.g., employment discrimination lawsuits in
    Ontario
  • In 2002-2003, 337 were due to race colour, 177
    were due to ethnicity, 153 were due to place of
    origin
  • In 2001-2002, 520 were due to race colour, 228
    were due to ethnicity, 126 were due to place of
    origin

3
Psychological Consequences of Negative
Inter-group Relations
  • Poor communication
  • Conflict
  • Stress
  • Dissatisfaction
  • Lowered Commitment
  • Intentions to Quit

4
Physical Consequences of Negative Inter-group
Relations
  • Cost of Employee Withdrawal
  • replacing employee, days absent, sick days
  • Mental health care costs
  • Lowered employee productivity
  • Health care costs
  • Legal costs
  • defending settling lawsuits
  • Lowered stock value

5
Positive Effects of Diversity
  • Higher annualized returns
  • Minority group members collectivism
    (group-orientation) interpersonal skills
    collaboration, cohesion, teamwork
  • See also Cox
  • Diverse groups decision making, creativity,
    marketing
  • Women tolerance for ambiguity cognitive
    complexity
  • Bilinguals cognitive complexity

6
Types of Diversity Initiatives
  • Managing Diversity
  • Changing org structure, policies, norms
    practices to create fairness
  • Valuing Diversity
  • Changing employee attitudes and behaviors via
    emphasizing equality/fairness values and/or
    providing training

7
Managing Diversity
  • Changing structure by changing composition of
    organization at all levels via
  • Recruitment, hiring, promotion
  • Compensation for diversity-based performance
  • Grievance procedure
  • Encouraging communication across and within all
    levels

8
Managing Diversity
  • Other strategies
  • Sponsoring caucus, advisory, and support groups
    for different groups
  • Offering benefit packages that appeal to
    minorities
  • Being more flexible in social norms (see also
    Cox)
  • Ensuring minority representation on internal
    committees
  • Creating career development programs for
    minorities (e.g., mentoring)
  • Community outreach to enhance organizations
    image and attract minority applicants

9
Valuing Diversity
  • Org emphasizes fairness/equality values
  • Provides training to
  • Increase awareness (sensitivity)
  • Cultural historical information about groups
  • Know about, and counteract stereotypes
  • E.g., Diversophy board game
  • Improve skills
  • Interpersonal, conflict management, language,
    mentoring
  • Change attitudes feelings
  • Hardest to do

10
Types of Diversity Training
  • What is culture?
  • Beliefs, norms, customs, knowledge, habits of a
    group
  • Why is learning about cultural differences
    important for diversity training?
  • Increases awareness of role of culture in social
    behaviors
  • Awareness can improve interactions between people
    of different cultural groups

11
Goals of Diversity Exercises
  • Highlight differences in communication styles
  • Culture-clash
  • Inter cultural conflict resolution
  • Owl sensitivity
  • Increase cultural identity
  • Pie chart, Backgrounds, Cultural circles
  • Interpersonal stereotyping
  • Diversity and perception, Car radio etc.
  • Group stereotyping
  • Gender language, Cross-gender role-play
  • Understand power differences Gain empathy
  • Disability Exercise

12
Evaluation of Diversity Training Programs
  • Tansik Driskill 1977
  • 20 hrs of lectures, case studies, role-playing
  • Small changes right after, positive changes 5
    weeks after, negative attitudes 12 weeks after
  • Sorcher Spence 1982
  • 10 week prog of watching videotapes of effective
    behaviors, role playing with reinforcement
  • No changes immediately or 6 weeks after, but
    positive changes 20 weeks after

13
Evaluation of Diversity Training Programs
  • Dunnette Motowildo (1982)
  • 3-days of small group discussions, readings,
    seminars, videos on sexist attitudes behaviors
  • No changes for men, but positive changes for
    women
  • Alderfer (1992)
  • Upward mobility program, balanced composition of
    promotion committees, workshop had lectures,
    role-plays and experiential activities
  • Increases in minorities in management ranks
  • Dominant group members evaluated program more
    negatively than minority group members

14
Evaluation of Diversity Training Programs
  • Ellis Sonnenfield (1994)
  • 1 day of watching videos of culturally
    insensitive behaviors and discussing them
  • 59 evaluated seminar positively
  • Tan, Morris, Romero (1996)
  • 3 days of case studies, simulations, videos,
    discussions
  • Increased knowledge of
  • diversity issues
  • barriers to change
  • sensitization to and knowledge of how to prevent
    negative effects of prejudice stereotypes

15
Evaluation of Diversity Training Programs
  • Hanover Cellar 1998
  • Videos, role playing, examination of diversity
    practices, action planning
  • Increased ratings on diversity practice measures
    (e.g., open discussions of group differences,
    discouraging comments perpetuating stereotypes)
  • Rynes Rosen 1995
  • 33 of HR managers surveyed rated diversity
    programs as successful but 18 rated them as
    unsuccessful
  • Mandatory prog were rated as more successful

16
Evaluation of Diversity Training Programs
  • Layng 1998
  • Analysis of commonly used video in diversity
    training programs
  • Introduced new stereotypes to replace old ones
  • Too much focus on incompetence of White male
    managers can alienate intended audience
  • Suggests that diversity leads to communication
    problems

17
Why such few Evaluations of Training Programs
  • Trainers do not like sharing techniques
  • Trainers do not know evaluation techniques
  • Evaluation requires time and money
  • Some evaluations take more time away from
    trainees jobs, are resisted by organizations
  • Showing no change (or negative change) is
    disadvantageous to trainer

18
Challenge for Diversity Trainers
  • Changing established norms practices of adults
    in organizations is difficult
  • Limited time for change to occur
  • Teach legal inter group aspects of diversity
  • Participants are resistant to change

19
Processes underlying Managing Diversity
  • Changes in structure, practices, incentives,
    norms to promote fairness changes behavior and
    (maybe?) attitudes
  • Reinforcement theory
  • Cognitive Dissonance Theory
  • Theory of reasoned action
  • Negative sanctions toward discriminatory behavior
    reduces it
  • Reinforcement theory
  • Theory of reasoned action

20
Processes underlying Valuing Diversity Organizatio
nal Values
  • When authority figures emphasize fairness or
    equality values (e.g., in mission statement) and
    follow up with own behavior or implement relevant
    rules, behavior changes
  • Theory of reasoned action

21
Processes underlying Valuing Diversity Training
  • Change knowledge of and understanding about
    different groups
  • Provide historical information about groups
  • Info on group differences in values, behaviors,
    norms, beliefs
  • Self-insights into own biases increased
    motivation to regulate discriminatory behavior
  • Provide experience or information that
    contradicts stereotypes
  • Create empathy (via role playing) positive
    changes in attitudes behavior

22
Processes underlying Valuing Diversity Difficultie
s with Training
  • Adult attitudes and behavior hard to modify bec
  • Lifelong exposure and experience with mass
    medias stereotypes
  • May react with defensiveness and avoidance to
    info that creates change
  • May feel they are being attacked or blamed during
    training

23
Resistance to Diversity Initiatives Individual
Barriers
  • Mandatory nature can be positive and negative
  • People who need it most get it vs. popularity is
    reduced
  • Change is experienced as threatening, provokes
    anxiety , resentment, hostility
  • Majority members may feel additionally threatened
    (as being attacked)
  • Minority members may feel uncomfortable when
    focus of attention during training

24
Resistance to Diversity Initiatives Organizational
Barriers
  • Traditional hierarchical structures
  • Standardized procedures, conformity norms
  • Selection promotion based on fit
  • Informal networks of communication
  • Token representation of minorities
  • Perception of demographic change in org
    composition as zero-sum game

25
Implementing a Managing Diversity Initiative
  • Need cultural audit to examine climate, history,
    current practices, need for new policies
  • Plan should be comprehensive, be in collaboration
    with labor, have clear objectives, measure
    progress toward objectives, specify which
    programs address which issues
  • Plan should fit with organizational climate
  • Anticipate and plan for resistance
  • Include training (valuing diversity)

26
Issues to Consider for Diversity Training
  • Include
  • Majority and minority members
  • Members from all organizational ranks
  • Diverse trainers on teams
  • Emphasize similarity within groups and
    differences
  • Know legal issues
  • Anticipate
  • Conflict between majority minority groups
  • Resentment from dominant groups
  • Negative reactions re slow pace of change from
    minorities
  • Avoid displays of favoritism
  • Present diversity policies in ways palatable to
    all participants

27
Issues to Consider for Diversity Training
  • Focus on training skills bec employers are
    legally responsible for employee behaviors
  • Cover a broad range of groups
  • Attend to trainees
  • inter group relations
  • Age, status, strength of ethnic identities
  • Decide on how to confront
  • Prevalent organizational values
  • Value differences between groups
  • Be thoroughly prepared
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