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Measuring gender bias at M.I.T. not scientific
Townhall.com ^ | March 31, 2002 | John Leo

Posted on 03/31/2002 10:36:32 AM PST by xsysmgr

One of my first columns dealt with a 1989 report accusing Wellesley College of racial discrimination. The report contained no evidence of anything remotely close to real bias. Instead it focused on discomfort among non-white students -- some cafeteria food was unfamiliar, posters in the bookstore featured Bavarian castles but no Third World settings. All of this was said to add up to subtle, "unconsciously white" bias that hobbled minority students.

This was my first exposure to the modern evidence-free, feelings-based bias report. Perhaps the most successful of these reports was the 1999 report on gender bias at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's School of Science. Gender bias operates in "a stealth-like way," said biology professor Nancy Hopkins, the driving force behind the report. "Stealth-like," "subtle" and "institutionalized" biases are the kinds you needn't document or even describe. They are just there.

Hopkins was allowed to form her own panel, which conducted its own inquiry and -- lo and behold -- produced the report that found her charge accurate. The committee made a stab at gathering evidence, measuring offices and counting heads, but nothing convincing was put on the table. The panel said it looked at quantitative measures of academic achievement, but refused to make its data public.

Professor Judith Kleinfeld of the University of Alaska-Fairbanks, who did an analysis for the right-of-center Independent Women's Forum, said the MIT study "presents no objective evidence whatever to support claims of gender discrimination." Younger women teaching at MIT seemed to agree. Buried in the back of the report was the admission that "untenured women faculty feel that men and women faculty are treated equally."

No matter. America's diversity machine threw itself fully behind the report, shaky as it was. The New York Times gave it uncritical Page One coverage. The Ford Foundation donated a million dollars to see if other universities needed the MIT treament. Hopkins was invited to the White House. MIT capitulated, accusing itself of deep (but "subtle" and vague) gender bias.

Now the gender bias analysts at MIT are back in the news, this time with reports on the four MIT schools not mentioned before. Again, the text is awash in feelings-based prose, with "women more frequently reporting negative experiences." Women "often feel undervalued" and "expressed feelings of exclusion." The word "marginalization," mandatory in bias reports, appears relentlessly. Subtle, hard-to-get-at sexism was again found to be the culrpit: "The discrepancies in treatment of male and female faculty have much more to do with small unconscious biases than blatant sexism."

Why do some MIT women feel marginalized? According to a report co-authored by James Steiger, a statistician and professor of psychology at the University of British Columbia, MIT senior women in biology, on average, published fewer scientific articles, were cited less in other scientists' work and brought in less grant money than the male scientists. All the women at MIT are very good. All would be stars elsewhere. But MIT is a very fast track, so some are below average for a campus that sets standards that high. Men in this predicament can't chalk it up to gender. Women can.

One MIT report tosses in good news then quickly paddles past it. It mentions that the engineering school has a history of giving tenure to a higher percentage of women than men, and quicker promotions to full professor as well. But then the report lurches back to chatter about marginalization. Even substantial pay raises for women are disparaged on the grounds that if they had been given earlier, more pension or retirement money would have accumulated.

The 200-odd pages of the reports are laid out in a way that makes it hard for journalists to encapsulate what is being said. One example, though: At one point the management report attempts to measure the comparative discomfort levels of female and male professors. It's a wildly unscientific effort. In general, said Steiger, "any undergraduate in a research methods course could debunk these reports."

The sad truth is that MIT, one of the world's great centers of scientific education, has now produced and accepted two astonishingly unscientific studies of its own administrative behavior. In response to these studies, nobody on campus has spoken out. Worse, the culture of MIT is being changed. Gender equity has replaced scientific merit as the value administrators will be judged by. As always in affirmative action schemes, women on the faculty will now come under suspicion as people who wouldn't be there except for politics. And all without any real discussion or open debate. Amazing.



TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: genderequity; pc

1 posted on 03/31/2002 10:36:32 AM PST by xsysmgr
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To: xsysmgr,All
Total US Population (March 2000)
Source: U.S. Census Bureau
274,087,000 100 %
Female
140,154,000 51 %
Male
133,933,000 49 %
2 posted on 03/31/2002 10:47:25 AM PST by 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub
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To: 68-69TonkinGulfYatchClub
Women 51%.  Yet the prison population is
overwhelmingly male.  Hence, the justice system
is institutionally sexist, neh?  Hmm.
3 posted on 03/31/2002 11:11:01 AM PST by gcruse
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To: xsysmgr
When I recently received a telemarketing call soliciting contributions from M.I.T. alumni, I told the caller that there was no way I would contribute a penny so long as the M.I.T. Administration continued with it's Politically Correct policies. And I insisted that he convey my reason to the people in charge of the fundraising.
4 posted on 03/31/2002 11:33:08 AM PST by dpwiener
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To: gcruse; xsysmgr
Gender bias operates in "a stealth-like way," said biology professor Nancy Hopkins, the driving force behind the report. "Stealth-like," "subtle" and "institutionalized" biases are the kinds you needn't document or even describe. They are just there.

That’s right! It’s subtle, often invisible, but just as damaging. And if you can’t see that, well, [smirk] you just don’t get it [subtle insinuation that you are a sexist/racist].

The panel said it looked at quantitative measures of academic achievement, but refused to make its data public.

That is such a male-centric [I can invent my own words. I have to because I’m so victimized by angry white men] of thinking. We have discovered more intuitive ways of knowing. Besides, if that data was made public, it would just be misconstrued by angry white men.

Hence, the justice system is institutionally sexist, neh? Hmm.

Uhhmmm… well, oh, just don’t get it. You can’t just uniformly apply theories like that. Because, well, angry white men control power and therefore can’t be victims of sexism. Yeah, it’s just more evidence of male aggression and things…

Owl _ Eagle
“Guns before butter.”

5 posted on 03/31/2002 11:59:05 AM PST by End Times Sentinel
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To: Owl_Eagle
Yeah, it’s just more evidence of male aggression and things…

The solution is a combination of artificial
insemination (turkus basterium), cloning
(feminis  maximus), and aborting male
fetuses.  Then Pax Lesbo will be upon us
and the fish will have its bicycle.  Wars
will be fought on the basis of who must
take out the trash.

6 posted on 03/31/2002 12:19:16 PM PST by gcruse
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