My recent posts on Unconscious Bias include a personal
story, the
legacy of patriarchy, schemas,
and studies
from sociology. You can probably tell that it is a subject that interests
me greatly. Therefore, I was delighted to find an article in Sunday’s
Washington Post that sheds new light on our biases as well as the importance of
“Sponsorships,” which are different from “Mentorships” in ways that are vital
to promotion and success. The article is:
By Brigid Schulte
Kent Gardiner, chairman of the law firm Crowell & Moring, sat down to talk about why his firm is partnering with economist Sylvia Ann Hewlett’s Center for Talent Innovation to promote sponsorship of women and minorities in the workplace, how sponsoring is different and why it matters.
Q: Why were you interested in starting a sponsorship program? Women have been graduating from college in greater numbers than men since 1985. Women make up nearly half of all law school students. Aren’t we “there” yet?
Kent Gardiner, chairman of the law firm Crowell & Moring, sat down to talk about why his firm is partnering with economist Sylvia Ann Hewlett’s Center for Talent Innovation to promote sponsorship of women and minorities in the workplace, how sponsoring is different and why it matters.
Q: Why were you interested in starting a sponsorship program? Women have been graduating from college in greater numbers than men since 1985. Women make up nearly half of all law school students. Aren’t we “there” yet?
