When twice as good isn't enough the case for cultural competence in computing
Abstract
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The commonly documented diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) issues in the computing
workforce are the direct result of corporate cultures that benefit specific groups
and marginalize others. This culture usually begins in undergraduate computing departments,
where the demographic representation mirrors that of industry. With no formal courses
that focus on the nontechnical issues affecting marginalized groups and how to address
and eradicate them, students are indirectly taught that the current status quo in
computing departments and industry is not only acceptable, but also unproblematic.
This directly affects students from marginalized groups (as the reasons for attrition
are similar in both higher education and industry), as well as faculty (as biased
student evaluations directly affect hiring, promotion, and tenure decisions). This
position paper presents the need for cultural competence as a required focus for university
computing departments nationwide. By improving these issues before students complete
baccalaureate computing degrees, companies will have talent pools that better understand
the importance and necessity of DEI and also work to ensure they help foster a more
diverse, equitable, and inclusive environment. In addition, more students from marginalized
groups will be retained in the major through degree completion.
Type
ConferencePermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/21269Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1145/3328778.3366792Collections
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Alicia Nicki Washington
Professor of the Practice of Computer Science
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