Résumé screening heuristic outcomes: an examination of hiring manager evaluation bias

Ozias A. Moore, Beth A. Livingston, Alex M. Susskind
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The purpose of this paper is to examine the role of a hiring manager's perceptions of race-system justification, that is, support for the status quo in relations between Black and White job candidates in reinforcing or mitigating hiring bias related to in-group and out-group membership during résumé screening.Design/methodology/approachDrawing from system justification theory (SJT) in a pre-selection context, in an experimental study involving 174 human resource managers, the authors tested two boundary conditions of the expected relationship between hiring manager and job candidate race on candidate ratings: (1) a hiring manager's affirmative action (AA) attitudes and system-justifying attitudes and (2) a job candidate's manipulated suitability for a position. This approach enabled us to juxtapose the racial composition of hiring manager–job candidate dyads under conditions in which the job candidate's race and competency for a posted position were manipulated to examine the conditions under which White and Black hiring managers are likely to make biased evaluations. The authors largely replicated these findings in two follow-up studies with 261 students and 361 online raters.FindingsThe authors found that information on a candidate's objective suitability for a job resulted in opposite-race positive bias among Black evaluators and same-race positive bias among White evaluators in study 1 alone. Conversely, positive attitudes toward AA policies resulted in in-group favoritism and strengthened a positive same-race bias for Black evaluators (study 1 and 2). We replicated this finding with a third sample to directly test system-justifying attitudes (study 3). The way in which White raters rated White candidates reflected the same attitudes against systems (AA attitudes) that Black raters rating Black candidates exhibited in the authors’ first two studies. Positive system-justifying attitudes or positive attitudes toward AA did not, however, translate into the elevation of same-race candidate ratings of suitability above those of opposite-race candidates.Research limitations/implicationsAlthough the size of the sample is on par with the percentage of Blacks nationwide in private-sector managerial-level positions ideally, the authors would have preferred to oversample Black HR managers. Given the scarcity of focus on Black HR managers, future researchers, using diverse samples of evaluators should also consider not only managers' and candidates' race but also their social dominance orientation. Moreover, it is important that future researchers use more racially diverse samples from other industries to more fully identify the ways in which the dynamics of system-justifying processes can emerge to influence evaluation bias during résumé screening.Practical implicationsAdvances in technology pose new challenges to HR hiring practices. This study attempts to fill a void regarding the unintended effects of bias during digital résumé screening. These trends have important HR implications. Initial screening of a job applicant's credentials while concurrently viewing the individual's photograph is likely to activate subconscious evaluation bias, produces inaccurate applicant ratings. This study's findings should caution hiring managers about the potential for bias to arise when viewing job candidates' digital résumés and encourage them to carefully examine various boundary conditions on racial similarity bias effects on applicant pre-screening and subsequent hiring decisions.Social implicationsThe study’s results suggest that bias might be attenuated as organizational leaders engage in efforts to understand their system-justifying motives and examine perceptions of the workplace social hierarchy (i.e. responses to status hierarchies) linked to perceptions of the status quo. For example, understanding how system justifying motives influence evaluation bias will inform how best to design training and other interventions that link discussions of workforce diversity to the relationships among groups within the organization's social hierarchy. This line of research should be further explored to better understand the complex forces at work when hiring managers adopt system-justifying motives during hiring evaluations.Originality/valueThe authors address the limitations of prior research by examining interactions between boundary conditions in a real-world context using real human resources hiring managers and more contemporary personnel-screening practices to test changes in the direction and strength of the relationship between hiring manager–job candidate race and hiring manager evaluations. Thus, the authors’ findings have implications for hiring bias and understanding of system-justification processes, particularly regarding how, when and why hiring managers support the status quo (i.e. perpetuate inequity) even if they are disadvantaged as a result.","PeriodicalId":72949,"journal":{"name":"Equality, diversity and inclusion : an international journal","volume":"30 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-08-30","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Equality, diversity and inclusion : an international journal","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1108/edi-04-2021-0115","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 2

Abstract

PurposeHiring managers commonly rely on system-justifying motives and attitudes during résumé screening. Given the prevalent use of modern résumé formats (e.g. LinkedIn) that include not only an applicant's credentials but also headshot photographs, visible sources of information such as an applicant's race are also revealed while a hiring manager simultaneously evaluates a candidate's suitability. As a result, such screening is likely to activate evaluation bias. The purpose of this paper is to examine the role of a hiring manager's perceptions of race-system justification, that is, support for the status quo in relations between Black and White job candidates in reinforcing or mitigating hiring bias related to in-group and out-group membership during résumé screening.Design/methodology/approachDrawing from system justification theory (SJT) in a pre-selection context, in an experimental study involving 174 human resource managers, the authors tested two boundary conditions of the expected relationship between hiring manager and job candidate race on candidate ratings: (1) a hiring manager's affirmative action (AA) attitudes and system-justifying attitudes and (2) a job candidate's manipulated suitability for a position. This approach enabled us to juxtapose the racial composition of hiring manager–job candidate dyads under conditions in which the job candidate's race and competency for a posted position were manipulated to examine the conditions under which White and Black hiring managers are likely to make biased evaluations. The authors largely replicated these findings in two follow-up studies with 261 students and 361 online raters.FindingsThe authors found that information on a candidate's objective suitability for a job resulted in opposite-race positive bias among Black evaluators and same-race positive bias among White evaluators in study 1 alone. Conversely, positive attitudes toward AA policies resulted in in-group favoritism and strengthened a positive same-race bias for Black evaluators (study 1 and 2). We replicated this finding with a third sample to directly test system-justifying attitudes (study 3). The way in which White raters rated White candidates reflected the same attitudes against systems (AA attitudes) that Black raters rating Black candidates exhibited in the authors’ first two studies. Positive system-justifying attitudes or positive attitudes toward AA did not, however, translate into the elevation of same-race candidate ratings of suitability above those of opposite-race candidates.Research limitations/implicationsAlthough the size of the sample is on par with the percentage of Blacks nationwide in private-sector managerial-level positions ideally, the authors would have preferred to oversample Black HR managers. Given the scarcity of focus on Black HR managers, future researchers, using diverse samples of evaluators should also consider not only managers' and candidates' race but also their social dominance orientation. Moreover, it is important that future researchers use more racially diverse samples from other industries to more fully identify the ways in which the dynamics of system-justifying processes can emerge to influence evaluation bias during résumé screening.Practical implicationsAdvances in technology pose new challenges to HR hiring practices. This study attempts to fill a void regarding the unintended effects of bias during digital résumé screening. These trends have important HR implications. Initial screening of a job applicant's credentials while concurrently viewing the individual's photograph is likely to activate subconscious evaluation bias, produces inaccurate applicant ratings. This study's findings should caution hiring managers about the potential for bias to arise when viewing job candidates' digital résumés and encourage them to carefully examine various boundary conditions on racial similarity bias effects on applicant pre-screening and subsequent hiring decisions.Social implicationsThe study’s results suggest that bias might be attenuated as organizational leaders engage in efforts to understand their system-justifying motives and examine perceptions of the workplace social hierarchy (i.e. responses to status hierarchies) linked to perceptions of the status quo. For example, understanding how system justifying motives influence evaluation bias will inform how best to design training and other interventions that link discussions of workforce diversity to the relationships among groups within the organization's social hierarchy. This line of research should be further explored to better understand the complex forces at work when hiring managers adopt system-justifying motives during hiring evaluations.Originality/valueThe authors address the limitations of prior research by examining interactions between boundary conditions in a real-world context using real human resources hiring managers and more contemporary personnel-screening practices to test changes in the direction and strength of the relationship between hiring manager–job candidate race and hiring manager evaluations. Thus, the authors’ findings have implications for hiring bias and understanding of system-justification processes, particularly regarding how, when and why hiring managers support the status quo (i.e. perpetuate inequity) even if they are disadvantaged as a result.
rsamsum筛选启发式结果:招聘经理评估偏见的检验
目的:招聘经理在筛选应聘者时,通常依赖于系统合理化的动机和态度。考虑到现代简历格式(如LinkedIn)的普遍使用,不仅包括求职者的证书,还包括头像照片,招聘经理在评估求职者是否合适的同时,也会暴露出求职者的种族等可见信息来源。因此,这样的筛选很可能会引发评价偏差。本文的目的是检验招聘经理对种族制度正当性的看法,即支持黑人和白人求职者之间关系的现状,在加强或减轻与组织内和组织外成员资格有关的招聘偏见中所起的作用。设计/方法/方法借鉴系统辩护理论(SJT)在预选背景下的理论,在一项涉及174名人力资源经理的实验研究中,作者测试了招聘经理和求职者种族对候选人评级的预期关系的两个边界条件:(1)招聘经理的平权行动(AA)态度和系统辩护态度;(2)求职者对职位的适应性操纵。这种方法使我们能够将招聘经理和求职者两组的种族构成并列,在这些条件下,求职者的种族和职位能力被操纵,以检查白人和黑人招聘经理可能做出偏见评估的条件。作者在对261名学生和361名在线评分者的两项后续研究中基本上重复了这些发现。研究结果作者发现,仅在研究1中,关于候选人是否客观适合某一工作的信息就会导致黑人评价者对种族歧视产生积极偏见,白人评价者对种族歧视产生积极偏见。相反,对AA政策的积极态度导致了群体内偏袒,并加强了黑人评估者的积极的同种族偏见(研究1和2)。我们用第三个样本重复了这一发现,直接测试了系统证明态度(研究3)。白人评分者对白人候选人的评价方式反映了黑人评分者对黑人候选人的评价在作者的前两项研究中所表现出的对系统的态度(AA态度)。然而,积极的系统辩护态度或对AA的积极态度并没有转化为同种族候选人的适合性评级高于相反种族候选人的评级。研究局限性/启示虽然样本的大小与全国私营部门管理级别职位的黑人比例相当,但作者更倾向于对黑人人力资源经理进行抽样。鉴于对黑人人力资源经理的关注不足,未来的研究人员在使用不同的评估者样本时,不仅应该考虑经理和候选人的种族,还应该考虑他们的社会优势取向。此外,重要的是,未来的研究人员使用来自其他行业的更多种族多样化的样本,以更充分地确定系统证明过程的动态可能出现的方式,以影响在rsamsum<s:1>筛选过程中的评估偏差。技术的进步对人力资源招聘实践提出了新的挑战。本研究试图填补关于在数字录影带筛选过程中偏见的意外影响的空白。这些趋势具有重要的人力资源含义。在看应聘者照片的同时,对应聘者的资历进行初步筛选很可能会激发潜意识的评估偏见,从而产生不准确的应聘者评级。这项研究的发现应该提醒招聘经理,在查看求职者的数字履历时,可能会出现偏见,并鼓励他们仔细检查种族相似性偏见对求职者预筛选和随后的招聘决策的影响的各种边界条件。社会意义研究结果表明,当组织领导者努力理解他们的系统辩护动机,并检查对工作场所社会等级制度的看法(即对地位等级制度的反应)与对现状的看法联系起来时,偏见可能会减弱。例如,了解系统辩护动机如何影响评估偏差,将告知如何最好地设计培训和其他干预措施,将劳动力多样性的讨论与组织社会等级内群体之间的关系联系起来。应该进一步探索这一研究方向,以便更好地理解在招聘经理在招聘评估中采用制度辩护动机时起作用的复杂力量。 原创性/价值作者解决了先前研究的局限性,通过使用真实的人力资源招聘经理和更现代的人员筛选实践来检查现实环境中边界条件之间的相互作用,以测试招聘经理-求职者种族和招聘经理评估之间关系的方向和强度的变化。因此,作者的研究结果对招聘偏见和对系统论证过程的理解有影响,特别是关于招聘经理如何、何时以及为什么支持现状(即持续的不平等),即使他们因此处于不利地位。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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