Code.org: Blame Tech Diversity On Education Pipeline, Not Hiring Discrimination

DEAD7

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"The biggest reason for a lack of diversity in tech," says Code.org's Hadi Partovi in a featured Re/code story, "isn't discrimination in hiring or retention. It's the education pipeline." (Code.org just disclosed "we have no African Americans or Hispanics on our team of 30.") Supporting his argument, Partovi added: "In 2013, not one female student took the AP computer science exam in Mississippi." (Left unsaid is that only one male student took the exam in Mississippi). Microsoft earlier vilified the CS education pipeline in its U.S. Talent Strategy as it sought "targeted, short-term, high-skilled immigration reforms" from lawmakers. And Facebook COO and "Lean In" author Sheryl Sandberg recently suggested the pipeline is to blame for Facebook's lack of diversity. "Girls are at 18% of computer science college majors," Sandberg told USA Today in August. "We can't go much above 18% in our coders [Facebook has 7,185 total employees] if there's only 18% coming into the workplace."
 

Mission249

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It is a mixture of both factors. It may lean more heavily toward the education pipeline in this case, but hiring discrimination is real in every field you can think of.
No system is perfect. In this case, the problem leans so heavily towards the education pipeline that the other side isn't even worth mentioning. I'm a black software engineer and companies are practically falling over themselves to hire me. Recruiters are contacting me constantly. Software engineering more than any industry is a meritocracy.

Yeah, sometimes the interviewer looks at me a little sideways when they see a black man walk in. But once I start talking their negative perceptions about my blackness quickly change into a positive. I transform from a guy who they think won't get hired into a great engineer who can also boost their diversity numbers.
 

无名的

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It's true. I've been looking at a lot of these computer bootcamps and many of them offer scholarships for every group except white males. There's a push to be more inclusive, but I'm not sure the interest is there.
 

mamba

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Nah hates?

They just disregard the more rigorous subjects, I'm sure there's no shortage of blacks with degrees in sociology and psychology...

nikkas love psychology, sociology, etc. A good rule of thumb for your major is the following:

If I have to ask you what you're going to do with that shyt after you finish, you're in a worthless major, brehs.

Your major should have an understood path toward a tangible career afterward. Anything else is a hobby or some shyt you would be better off minoring in.
 
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Serious

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No system is perfect. In this case, the problem leans so heavily towards the education pipeline that the other side isn't even worth mentioning. I'm a black software engineer and companies are practically falling over themselves to hire me. Recruiters are contacting me constantly. Software engineering more than any industry is a meritocracy.

Yeah, sometimes the interviewer looks at me a little sideways when they see a black man walk in. But once I start talking their negative perceptions about my blackness quickly change into a positive. I transform from a guy who they think won't get hired into a great engineer who can also boost their diversity numbers.
@semtex you should be :eat:
 

AquaCityBoy

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nikkas love psychology, sociology, etc. A good rule of thumb for your major is the following:

If I have to ask you what you're going to do with that shyt after you finish, you're in a worthless major, brehs.

Your major should have an understood path toward a tangible career afterward. Anything else is a hobby or some shyt you would be better off minoring in.

No. :snoop:
 
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