We need some more self-efficacy, ladies

Catching up with my feed reading, I see that lately there’s been some buzz in the ’sphere around Let’s All Evolve Past This: The Barriers Women Face in Tech Communities. It is indeed a very insightful article.

In particular, I am pleased to see someone talking about the differences in handling sub-optimal communication and how it affects the whole ‘women in tech’ issue. The bit under the heading Men are generally very good at ignoring bad behavior is spot on.

But even though the article gives some good advice on building communities with better communication patterns, it does not give any advice to women as to how to help themselves to better cope with difference in communication modes. For example, it would help if more women were aware of these differences and would try to contemplate harsh things said by their colleagues in the context of the colleague’s overall behavior and character, and avoid over-analyzing these comments.

Quite a few of the problems faced by women in tech could be addressed by working on women’s self-efficacy. Among other things, people with higher self-efficacy are more comfortable taking harsh criticism, are more likely to voice their opinions, have higher motivation, and are more willing to take some risks and experiment. So maybe we should all be working on that. I, for one, will try to work on mine.

2 comments ↓

#1 Paul M on 07.08.07 at 4:17 pm

I enjoyed your comments about self efficacy - there is a site you visit dedicated to the same http://www.thriving.org.

Nice work.

#2 Henner Z. on 07.11.07 at 7:53 pm

Regarding communication patterns and the way to improve it - for me immediately the old quote from RFC 793 comes to mind, giving advice about implementations of network stacks but happens to be true for human communication as well:

“Be conservative in what you do, be liberal in what you accept from others.” (Jon Postel)

This is actually two advices; translated to human communication this could be:
1) don’t bail out on bad/harsh phrases but concentrate on the actual content. People are different (much more than network stacks!), depending on culture/gender/origin/experience/… and so are their communication patterns.

2) Give a good example in clear communication that is initiated by yourself.

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