Everyday Bias, Howard J. Ross
Everyday Bias, Howard J. Ross
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Everyday Bias
Identifying and Navigating Unconsious Judgment in Our Daily Lives

Author: Howard J. Ross

Narrator: Michael Puttonen

Unabridged: 8 hr 4 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 01/01/2016

Categories: Nonfiction, Self-help

Includes: Bonus Material Bonus Material Included


Synopsis

“Everyday Bias is an outstanding work that belongs on the desk, coffee table, library, book bag, briefcase, and e-reader of everyone and anyone who has contact with people. Yes, we are biased and we are able to reframe our biases and reprogram our biased responses and lead productive, positive lives that influence others in a positive manner.” Sonja V. Harry, PhD, LMSW, ACSW, Assistant Professor of Social Work, Winston-Salem State University.
Are you biased? May as well ask, “are you human”? Because if you are human, you are biased. Howard Ross, diversity expert, explores this fundamental truth and the biases we each hold. Most of us do not see ourselves as biased towards people of different races, genders, or religious/cultural backgrounds, and yet, disparities remain in virtually every area of modern life. Even in corporate America, which has seemed to embrace the idea of diversity, patterns of disparity remain rampant. Why?
Recent breakthroughs in the cognitive and neurosciences provide insight into why our results are inconsistent with our intentions. Bias is a survival mechanism that is fundamental to our identity, it is natural to the human mind. It is overwhelmingly unconscious. Ross helps readers understand how and why unconscious bias impacts our daily lives, particularly our daily work lives, incorporating anecdotes from today’s headlines as well as case studies from over 30 years of research. And, most importantly, he answers the question: “Is there anything we can do about it?”, offering ways we can become less unconsciously biased towards people who are different from us.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Donna

As a teen I was lucky enough to know everything. My Dad dubbed this teen phase, The I Know Years. That’s the teen answer, I know, everyone knows that, and/or didn’t you know that? What I didn’t know and only found out as I grew older was, there was a lot I didn’t know. A lot. What I didn’t know was so......more

Goodreads review by Bonnie

This is a fascinating book. It tells us that everyone has innate bias, that we are all a product of our environment, that the messages we receive and the experiences we have from the time we are infants influences who we see as "one of us" or "one of them". The author doesn't categorize bias as bein......more

Goodreads review by Jessica

This was a pretty basic overview to the idea of biases. The author uses some brain science and some real-life examples to explain how bias is in everyone. At times it came across like "Everyone's a little bit racist" in a way that was divorced from larger structures of power and privilege. However,......more

Goodreads review by Jason

As someone with a PhD in psychology who has done work on bias, I am admittedly a very tough audience for a book like this. That being said, this book excels where Malcolm Gladwell fails: Howard Ross never tries to act like implicit bias or social identity theory is something he created. Instead, he......more