Truth be told, it’s just another form of therapy. In the corporate world they call it sensitivity training, but it’s a form of group therapy, designed to gaslight staff into believing that equity programs are fair and balanced.
In fact, as long as different people are judged by different standards and are assumed to be playing by different rules, they will not be able to get along. All the sensitivity training in the world is not going to overcome the distortion introduced by diversity hiring and diversity promotion.
So, the least surprising aspect of Jesse Singal’s New York Times op-ed is that anyone anywhere ever imagined that sensitivity training would ever work.
Anyway, for the corporate dimwits who are so quick to adopt the latest fad, the results are now in:
D.E.I. trainings are designed to help organizations become more welcoming to members of traditionally marginalized groups. Advocates make bold promises: Diversity workshops can foster better intergroup relations, improve the retention of minority employees, close recruitment gaps and so on. The only problem? There’s little evidence that many of these initiatives work. And the specific type of diversity training that is currently in vogue — mandatory trainings that blame dominant groups for D.E.I. problems — may well have a net-negative effect on the outcomes managers claim to care about.
This leads to the following conclusion:
If diversity trainings have no impact whatsoever, that would mean that perhaps billions of dollars are being wasted annually in the United States on these efforts. But there’s a darker possibility: Some diversity initiatives might actually worsen the D.E.I. climates of the organizations that pay for them.
As for the content of these programs, it is clearly a bunch of critical race theory. It teaches white people that they are responsible for the underperformance of non-white people. It’s a massive guilt trip, one that makes whites resent non-whites.
They often seem geared more toward sparking a revolutionary reunderstanding of race relations than solving organizations’ specific problems. And they often blame white people — or their culture — for harming people of color. For example, the activist Tema Okun’s work cites concepts like objectivity and worship of the written word as characteristics of “white supremacy culture.” Robin DiAngelo’s “white fragility” trainings are designed to make white participants uncomfortable. And microaggression trainings are based on an area of academic literature that claims, without quality evidence, that common utterances like “America is a melting pot” harm the mental health of people of color. Many of these trainings run counter to the views of most Americans — of any color — on race and equality. And they’re generating exactly the sort of backlash that research predicts.
So, Singal concludes, it’s a pricey fad.
The history of diversity trainings is, in a sense, a history of fads. Maybe the current crop will wither over time, new ones will sprout that are stunted by the same lack of evidence, and a decade from now someone else will write a version of this article. But it’s also possible that organizations will grow tired of throwing time and money at trainings where the upside is mostly theoretical and the potential downsides include unhappy employees, public embarrassment and even lawsuits. It’s possible they will realize that a true commitment to D.E.I. does not lend itself to easy solutions.
How much of the "quiet quitting" trend can be traced back to employees being told that they are the wrong skin color and gender and therefore ineligible for raises and promotions, or on the other hand they are of the proper gender and/or skin color and therefore - regardless of performance - they are automatically eligible for raises and promotions?
ReplyDeleteFreddo makes a great point! Also, don't forget Lee Harvey Oswald. He killed Kennedy, which resulted in Johnson (worst President in American history), which resulted in the "Great Society," which resulted in generations of dependents who think they are "entitled" to everything, which means if they don't get what they think they are entitled to, it's someone else's fault, and that someone else is Whitey. No wonder no one gives a shit.
ReplyDeleteI was never racist. It confused me. Then the Air Force made me go through a Race Relations class. I was talked to as if I had Created the KKK. After that I started looking around. The black guys could walk around with their uniforms messed up, and they did, because they would file a complaint if a superior did anything about it. A guy in the Fire department, across the street from our shop, went AWOL. So, they signed him out on three day pass, then used his leave time, Then he was reported AWOL.
ReplyDeleteThe mantra of Diversity is Strength, why not have a white midget on the basketball team?
True equality is being able to tell a friend or coworker, regardless of his color, that he just said something colossally stupid.
ReplyDeleteI've seen this movie before. DIE [sic] "trainings" are just a ham-handed remake. The original, in my professional life, was the fad that mandated quality control "trainings", usually conducted off-site in some cheesy hotel "function room", claiming to teach the application of statistical quality control (derived for manufacturing) to corporate departments like HR.
ReplyDeleteUsually, if one watches the latest business-book best-sellers in the C-suite, the next wave of consultant "trainings" will match the claims of those books. For example, here's what executives were reading in 2019:
https://mck.co/3kwhLKr
"[DEI training] teaches white people that they are responsible for the underperformance of non-white people."
ReplyDeleteYes, but at the same time it also teaches white people the opposite -- namely, that the perceived underperformance of non-whites isn't "underperformance" at all, but an illusion caused by whites' racist belief in objectivity, efficiency, perfectionism and other values of "white supremacist" culture.
So it's no wonder so many whites emerge from these DEI sessions with splitting headaches; it's a normal response to being forced to believe 2 completely contradictory ideas at the same time.