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View Full Version : Gender Impressions, Is the Professor Bossy or Brilliant?



NatiaCutie
02-17-2015, 09:18 PM
I found this study that shows how terrible discrimination against women in the workplace can be.

And then people dare tell me that feminism doesn't have anything else to change in society :picard2:






Is the Professor Bossy or Brilliant? Much Depends on Gender

Male professors are brilliant, awesome and knowledgeable. Women are bossy and annoying, and beautiful or ugly.

These are a few of the results from a new interactive chart that was gaining notice on social media Friday. Benjamin Schmidt, a Northeastern University history professor, says he built the chart using data from 14 million student reviews on the Rate My Professors site. It allows you to search for any word to see how often it appeared in reviews and how it broke down by gender and department.

The chart makes vivid unconscious biases. The implications go well beyond professors and college students, to anyone who gives or receives feedback or performance reviews.

It suggests that people tend to think more highly of men than women in professional settings, praise men for the same things they criticize women for, and are more likely to focus on a woman’s appearance or personality and on a man’s skills and intelligence.

“When we use these reviews and evaluations to assess people, we need to keep in mind that the way people write them is really culturally conditioned," Mr. Schmidt said.

http://static01.nyt.com/images/2015/02/07/upshot/07up-professorts/07up-professorts-blog427.png
Results for a search of "genius" on the interactive chart show students are likelier to apply this word to their male professors.


We've heard about these stereotypes before. Sheryl Sandberg, the Facebook executive who wrote “Lean In," has said that women are called bossy when they show the same behaviors that in men are called assertive. As Ms. Sandberg and Adam Grant, a business professor, wrote in a New York Times article today about men and women in the office, “A man who doesn’t help is ‘busy’; a woman is ‘selfish.’”

A recent report on 248 tech company employee performance reviews found that women are much more likely to receive critical feedback than men, and women who are leaders are more likely to be described as abrasive, aggressive and emotional. McSweeney's captured this double standard in a humor piece titled “Reasons You Were Not Promoted That Are Totally Unrelated to Gender.”

Studies have also shown that students can be biased against female professors. In one, teachers graded and returned papers to students at the exact same time, but when asked to rate their promptness, students gave female professors lower scores than men. Biases cut both ways — teachers have also been found to believe girls are not as good in math and science, even when they perform similarly to boys.

Mr. Schmidt, who made the chart as part of a project called Bookworm for searching and visualizing large texts, said he was struck by “this spectrum from smart to brilliant to genius, where each one of those is more strongly gendered male than the previous one was." He was also surprised that relatively few people commented on female professors’ clothing or looks, which he had expected to be the case.

Another surprise, he said, was Shakespeare — apparently many more men than women teach it in English departments.


Men are more likely to be described as a star, knowledgeable, awesome or the best professor. Women are more likely to be described as bossy, disorganized, helpful, annoying or as playing favorites. Nice or rude are also more often used to describe women than men.

Men and women seemed equally likely to be thought of as tough or easy, lazy, distracted or inspiring.

Interestingly, women were more likely to be described in reviews as role models. Mr. Schmidt notes that the reviews are anonymous, so he doesn't know the gender of reviewers. It could be that more female students describe female professors as role models than men do when describing men or women.


Results for 'bossy':

http://assets.feministing.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/Screen-Shot-2015-02-09-at-11.26.08-AM.png

Aviator
02-17-2015, 09:55 PM
I can only imagine what a bossy person you are.

NatiaCutie
02-17-2015, 10:03 PM
I can only imagine what a bossy person you are.

Oh well. I can live with that.
I will always know I'm a sincere and transparent girl who is not afraid to be herself.

Beitel, yourself and the resident nazis are forced to live hypocritical lives, pretending to be normal out of FEAR of being shunned for the disgusting things you are; only having the anonimity of Internet to really exist. Can't wait for the time when this thing is finally monitored properly, just like the mobile phone network is, and we can finally be rid of this problem.

Aviator
02-17-2015, 10:05 PM
only having the anonimity of Internet to really exist.

:laugh: You're out of the loop.

NatiaCutie
02-17-2015, 10:08 PM
:laugh: You're out of the loop.

Laugh if you want.
Doesn't mean you won't sooner or later end up in jail like you deserve :)

You asked me one time what my career path would be.
To answer that, it's precisely to treat ill people like yourself. Inmates, patients and that sort of thing in need of proper psychological therapy and education.

If medicine keeps moving forward, we may end up having pharmaceutical products to even speed up the process.
I only have to sit and wait, as the world keeps moving forward, and the pestilent hatred is tracked down and eliminated from its roots.

NatiaCutie
02-18-2015, 03:22 AM
Typical, when faced with a blatant example of terrible sexism, the brave traditional men can't say anything. Let it slide sure, and let a woman be belittled in her position just because of her gender.

alpha
02-18-2015, 03:34 AM
ll

NatiaCutie
02-18-2015, 04:05 AM
ll

Why delete your post?

Sarmatian
02-18-2015, 04:51 AM
We've heard about these stereotypes before. Sheryl Sandberg, the Facebook executive who wrote “Lean In," has said that women are called bossy when they show the same behaviors that in men are called assertive.

And quite fairly so from my experience. An average business is a social environment created by men by rules of men and for men. Once woman got into such environment she have no choice but to play by the same rules. The problem is to be a man and to play a man by men's rules are two very different things.


A recent report on 248 tech company employee performance reviews found that women are much more likely to receive critical feedback than men, and women who are leaders are more likely to be described as abrasive, aggressive and emotional.

They are very often. Very few women can handle stress as effective as men. They are good when everything is calm and smooth but as soon as things getting desperate most women losing it and going insane.


Studies have also shown that students can be biased against female professors. In one, teachers graded and returned papers to students at the exact same time, but when asked to rate their promptness, students gave female professors lower scores than men. Biases cut both ways — teachers have also been found to believe girls are not as good in math and science, even when they perform similarly to boys.

Selected the important bit for you. A personal belief is based on perception and perception is based on complex subjective judgements about individual capabilities. Way too often boys showing good results in math and science with little to none effort while for most girls it takes regular exercises and strict discipline to excel in such subjects. Show me a girl who can spend most of her time with mates partying and drinking and end up with perfect or nearly perfect score in math. For boys it's a regular occurrence.


Men are more likely to be described as a star, knowledgeable, awesome or the best professor. Women are more likely to be described as bossy, disorganized, helpful, annoying or as playing favorites. Nice or rude are also more often used to describe women than men.

The problem here is men put more emphasis on technical aspects of their lives while women working too much on social aspects. When a man just focused on doing his job excellently and others are impressed by his achievements a woman spends too much time thinking about how to create impression rather than to achieve results. There are men like that too and believe me they are labelled bossy, disorganized, annoying and playing favorites just same as women. I'm working with one fella like that and quite a few people want him out but he's playing favorites too well. So it has little to do with gender and more with factual behavior in all of its aspects.