Blind audition study: Truth or myth? | FACTUAL FEMINIST

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  • čas přidán 19. 06. 2024
  • ARTICLE - Blind Spots in the ‘Blind Audition’ Study on.wsj.com/2J4zIKk
    The blind orchestra audition study is one of the most celebrated social science papers in history and supposedly helped to shed a fact-based light on the issue of gender bias. But contrary to its findings, several scholars and data scientists claim to have recently found quite a few holes in the analysis. AEI's Christina Hoff Sommers takes a look into this study to identify the validity of its claims.
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Komentáře • 503

  • @vecernicek2
    @vecernicek2 Před 4 lety +530

    As a neuroscientist, I am often shocked how low a standard of evidence is often accepted in social sciences. I realize this comment is going to offend a lot of people, but it's true.

    • @antonioanon6672
      @antonioanon6672 Před 4 lety +8

      A neuroscientist asserting their comment about their emotional state is true?
      Fucking academia is so garbage.

    • @joemerino3243
      @joemerino3243 Před 4 lety +43

      Researchers in the 'soft sciences' would never be able to publish anything if they were held to the standards of molecular biology.

    • @greatbriton8425
      @greatbriton8425 Před 4 lety +15

      @@antonioanon6672 What he's asserting is true is the low standard of evidence. What are they teaching in schools these days?

    • @canadianroot
      @canadianroot Před 4 lety +32

      "In order to be able to think, you have to risk being offensive." J. Peterson.

    • @joemerino3243
      @joemerino3243 Před 4 lety +5

      @Natasel are 'strict controls' remotely possible in the soft sciences? I can't think of a way to avoid some form of sampling bias. Even very loose, ad-hoc controls are only possible in psychology. In sociology or economics there's no real controls at all.

  • @alanwilliams3677
    @alanwilliams3677 Před 4 lety +240

    "Truth matters." Not for those with an ideological axe to grind it doesn't.

    • @macmcleod1188
      @macmcleod1188 Před 4 lety +2

      And you are referring to the American Enterprise Institute, correct?

    • @bornfree8073
      @bornfree8073 Před 4 lety +1

      @@macmcleod1188 please point out where this video was wrong.

    • @macmcleod1188
      @macmcleod1188 Před 4 lety

      @@bornfree8073 no. It's not worth my time at this point. It's enough just to point out that it's a biased source and it's been funded by people who are known to lie in the past and you should consume it with caution or not consume it at all.
      What you're doing is like what kellyanne Conway does. Throw out of screen of Lies faster than they can be disproved.
      But that's not the point. The point is we know she's funded by liars. Once you know someone's a liar like Conway or president trump,, you know it's pointless to try and keep up with their lies. Because they can lie faster than you can disprove them.
      I'm fine if she has a right-wing bias or if she is funded by people who have a right-wing bias.
      Addressing individual lies just gets you lost in the weeds.

    • @theevermind
      @theevermind Před 4 lety +2

      They believe "no truth but power."
      Of course truth doesn't matter to them. They don't believe that truth is even real.

    • @99percenter1
      @99percenter1 Před 4 lety +1

      @@macmcleod1188 No, it's not "enough just to point out that it's a biased source and it's been funded by people who are known to lie in the past". You are the one making the accusation, so it is you who must back it up with an example if you want anyone to believe it. Commenters make all kinds of claims that aren't true. If you think your accusation is important enough to make it, then you have to give them a basis for thinking it might be true. People aren't going to research your accusation just on your say-so.

  • @AlexSmith-gr4hp
    @AlexSmith-gr4hp Před 4 lety +108

    "Not statistically significant but economically significant". Oh Lordy.

    • @iandamianluciferwilson7385
      @iandamianluciferwilson7385 Před 4 lety

      Econ- Sumerian, meaning Male Bovine. .Omically- Latin, meaning Excrement (Like my knowledge of ancient languages)

    • @mickieg1118
      @mickieg1118 Před 4 lety +1

      Meaning - Our research amounts to a nothingburger, but if we claim it proves sexism, it's going to make us a lot of cash.

    • @kr3236
      @kr3236 Před 4 lety +2

      haha, I wouldn't mind seeing more social scientists pulling meaningless adverbs out of their asses to replace "statistically." "The impact was not statistically significant, but it was DELICIOUSLY significant!"

  • @thulgrum1
    @thulgrum1 Před 4 lety +269

    This was also done recently by the West Australian govt. for hiring public servants. When they discovered that there was a decrease in females being hired they just dropped it and never mentioned it again

  • @VilleMetsola
    @VilleMetsola Před 4 lety +289

    I think screens are a good idea if only because it's a known fact that attractive people get preferential treatment. This way the ugly talented musicians actually get a real shot!

    • @madcyclist58
      @madcyclist58 Před 4 lety +2

      @ Ville Metsola yes, where are the ugly violinists in todays orchestras?

    • @hornkraft9438
      @hornkraft9438 Před 4 lety +17

      What do viola players use for birth control? Their personalities ...

    • @jmanakajosh9354
      @jmanakajosh9354 Před 4 lety +1

      I wish I could upvote this 80 times

    • @awesimo4684
      @awesimo4684 Před 4 lety +16

      Nobody wants to talk about beauty discrimination.

    • @AdelaeR
      @AdelaeR Před 4 lety +6

      Personally I trust ugly musicians more than beautiful ones. I'm biased that way.

  • @MrKrtek00
    @MrKrtek00 Před 4 lety +68

    “Doubled! Went put 50%” :) Yeah, that sounds like a Harvard level scientist

    • @MrKrtek00
      @MrKrtek00 Před 4 lety

      @ and was head of APS if her bio is true...

    • @NikhileshSurve
      @NikhileshSurve Před 3 lety

      Must be the woke or feminist maths

    • @VR00100
      @VR00100 Před 3 lety

      How did they pass 2nd grade 🤦🏾‍♂️

  • @meh3017
    @meh3017 Před 4 lety +89

    Glad to see Christina is back.

    • @zissler1
      @zissler1 Před 4 lety

      Meh where’d she go.

    • @meh3017
      @meh3017 Před 4 lety

      @@zissler1 She's been doing stuff but just not factual feminist episodes.

  • @minagica
    @minagica Před 4 lety +101

    Going up by 50% is not doubling 😂

    • @JNYC-gb1pp
      @JNYC-gb1pp Před 4 lety +7

      Its lady math you woman hater!

    • @lamontcranston8181
      @lamontcranston8181 Před 4 lety

      Jay L still typing like Stephen Hawking with two lazy eyes, eh?

    • @idratherbeoutdoors3085
      @idratherbeoutdoors3085 Před 4 lety

      I don't recall perfectly, but didn't the "doubled" comment refer to a specific orchestra's experience after implementing blind auditions? Too lazy to rewatch...

    • @JohnDoe-xf2ke
      @JohnDoe-xf2ke Před 4 lety +1

      It didn't actually increase it by 50% either. In some cases, it reduced it. In some cases it increased it. The data contradicts the conclusions.

    • @minagica
      @minagica Před 4 lety +1

      @@JohnDoe-xf2ke I'm very disappointed in my ex tribe, their integrity is a bad as that of religious presuppositionalist "scientists" -_-

  • @southafricanizationofsociety20

    Crying on Twitter is definitely signs of strength and independence.

  • @DwarkeshPatel
    @DwarkeshPatel Před 4 lety +30

    Sommers is invaluable. Thanks so much for clarifying this issue!

  • @rufussweeneymd
    @rufussweeneymd Před 4 lety +13

    Anytime you see the word “I think” in a “scientific” paper, you know things are sketchy.

    • @mickieg1118
      @mickieg1118 Před 4 lety +1

      At least it wasn't "My truth..."

  • @kroon275
    @kroon275 Před 4 lety +34

    Blind Feminism
    P.s. 'doubled, went up 50%' tells you everything you need to know about modern feminisms use of data
    😏

  • @TheHuntermj
    @TheHuntermj Před 4 lety +22

    Blind Auditions *can* reduce the amount of women whinging about not getting hired

    • @hellogoodbye4061
      @hellogoodbye4061 Před 4 lety +6

      If blind auditions failed to work in women's favor they would insist on quotas to increase "diversity." Win/Win for them.

    • @sinaloa367
      @sinaloa367 Před 4 lety +4

      @@hellogoodbye4061 From a Wall Street Journal article by Christina Hoff Sommers:
      In 2017 a team of behavioural economists in the Australian government published the results of a large, randomised controlled study entitled "Going Blind to See More Clearly." It was directly inspired by the blind-audition study. Iris Bohnet, a Harvard Kennedy School dean and Goldin-Rouse enthusiast, served as an adviser.
      For the study, more than 2,000 managers in the Australian Public Service were asked to select recruits from randomly assigned resumes-some disguising the applicant's sex, others not. The research team fully expected to find far more female candidates shortlisted when sex was disguised. But, as the stunned team leader told the local media: "We found the opposite, that de-identifying candidates reduced the likelihood of women being selected for the shortlist." It turned out that many senior managers, aware that sexist assumptions had once kept women out of upper-level positions, already practised a mild form of affirmative action. Anonymized hiring was not only time-consuming and costly, it proved to be an obstacle to women's equality. The team plans to look elsewhere for solutions.

    • @martuldolig6063
      @martuldolig6063 Před 4 lety

      @@sinaloa367 owww so this is what happened from the other comment that I read, about Australian government blind audition results more failed women. And they don't want to mention it.

    • @sinaloa367
      @sinaloa367 Před 4 lety +3

      @Entrenched Mgtow There's a real sense of deja vu here. There was a policy of 'numerus clausus' in the 20th century throughout Europe and North America which restricted the participation of Jews in higher education. In many U.S. Universities the number of Jewish students ranged from 30% to 50%, so between the 1920's up until as recently as the 1970's they had strict quota systems for Jewish admission. For example Cornell University reduced the Jewish student population from 40% in 1920 to 3.5% in 1940. Yale were even worse, they had a policy admitting only 5 Jewish students per year. The case of Yale is an interesting one, i believe they were the first to introduce a 'Legacy' policy, (which continues in Universities to this day), and also introduced discriminatory policies based on character and attitude. There have been allegations that the latter policy has been used against Asians in many Universities for nearly 40 years, and explicit proposals to use it against Whites.
      I think there is little doubt that there has been a great loss of intellectual capital, (and an inevitable hindrance on technological and economic advancement), in Europe and North America because of these policies. Richard Feynman, one of the greatest physicists of the 20th century very nearly slipped through the net after being rejected by Columbia because of quotas, fortunately he was persistent and eventually got a place at MIT. Now the same thing is increasingly happening with whites and Asians and i think it's hard to exaggerate the detrimental effect on society. It's not just an obstacle to progress, but it's very dangerous to discriminate against and marginalise a very resourceful majority demographic; they can fight back!
      We are beginning to see the emergence of not just a White Nationalist movement throughout the West, but a White Trans-nationalist movement. In Europe, many Germanic, Slavic, Celtic and Latin Europeans are beginning to feel an affinity for one another that is largely reactionary, and i think similar sentiment is growing in North America. Unless the brakes are put on this intersectional insanity things are going to get extremely violent. It's ludicrous to address issues of race, gender, poverty, education etc etc, and equitable access to resources by discriminating against specific groups. It's particular bigoted when most individuals in the main group being targeted, (white males), have neither power nor privilege.

    • @condew6103
      @condew6103 Před 4 lety

      I believe Australia briefly tried blind hiring for the government, beleving women would do better. Turned out women did worse and they abandoned the program

  • @TheRonBerg
    @TheRonBerg Před 4 lety +94

    This woman is brilliant, open-minded and honest. Understandable that the Left don't like her

    • @gregwall6553
      @gregwall6553 Před 4 lety +7

      Don't like her, they hate her. Facts hurt those who think victim hood is primacy. Ignore MLK.

    • @y3sno4
      @y3sno4 Před 4 lety

      Don’t forget she also brought a 🐶 into her video so she’s perfect

    • @CrazyChiv
      @CrazyChiv Před 4 lety +1

      Do they like anyone? They can't even stand each other.

  • @justenfinch5911
    @justenfinch5911 Před 4 lety +11

    Audition screens have done more to prevent nepotism than help anybody for whatever reasons.

  • @nvjeanette4390
    @nvjeanette4390 Před 4 lety +8

    you are a gem, christina. despite racking up subscriptions to all sites that include your content, this is the first time in a long time i have encountered a current one. such a treat, because you model use of empirical evidence & logic with a graceful treatment of those purveying non- to partial- truths you reveal. lovely. i remember thinking when i heard about blind audition study that just for starters, these people presumably have the most exquisitely attuned sense of hearing & would be able to inevitably pick up every tell such as the sound of shoes walking in, breathing patterns, & other things i wouldn't think of.

  • @kuruman1
    @kuruman1 Před 4 lety +15

    I’d like to see you tackle another blindly accepted “fact”...that giving aid directly to women in developing countries has a greater economic impact. I heard recently that this oft-cited tidbit was completely made up.

  • @NoobsDeSroobs
    @NoobsDeSroobs Před 4 lety +21

    Number of women doubled, did they? Aha. An entire 50%? Makes sense.

  • @JNYC-gb1pp
    @JNYC-gb1pp Před 4 lety +11

    So it seems these two women who wrote this article outlining how they studied the stats and did the math aren't very good at stats or math.

    • @gelf1907
      @gelf1907 Před 4 lety +2

      Well they are employed by Harvard and Yale, so you have to cut them some slack. It is not like they work for a state college of some school actually educating students.

  • @whiteslann9154
    @whiteslann9154 Před 4 lety +7

    I agree with everything Professor Sommers said, but the dog at the end was the best part of the video

  • @juliafox52
    @juliafox52 Před 4 lety +17

    I teach violin. For the first 15 years that I taught, I always had approximately half girl students and half boy students and for many years, it leaned towards more male students. I stopped teaching for a couple of years to live abroad with my husband. Three years ago I moved back to restart my studio. For every 4 or 5 girls I get in the studio, I only get 1 boy. Granted, my sample size is incredibly small and I'm also dependent upon Google algorithms in part for exposure to new students, but it has been consistent and feels off-kilter. There is even an attitude among the girls that girls "rock" and they are quite vocal about being "better" and superior to boys. My pet theory is that if the little girls have picked this up, then so, too, have the little boys and perhaps even their parents, who may no longer be willing to invest in their sons who may also be feeling inferior and not displaying what parents might look for in order to seek out lessons. I'm wondering if anyone else has had this gender attitude and/or imbalance in their practice.

    • @hellogoodbye4061
      @hellogoodbye4061 Před 4 lety +14

      Oh without a doubt this permeates in our current school system....where my daughter goes to high school, the girls were led into the science labs to listen to university STEM students tell them how smart and "empowering" they were...the boys were told to wait in the hallways while this took place. True story....and to make matters worse, later that day, the boys, and the boys only, had to attend a mandatory "sexual harassment/assault awareness class" in which they were, more or less, told they were nothing more than potential toxic rapists, molesters, harassers, sexual assaulting, woman beating pieces of crap. Thankfully,, enough parents protested that the administration agreed to allow the boys to enter the classroom when the university STEM students next return. Just horrid how boys are treated in our schools today....a small sample here, but it seems to speak volumes.

    • @juliafox52
      @juliafox52 Před 4 lety +5

      @@hellogoodbye4061 Thank you for sharing! That's heartbreaking, I hope more people wake up and take a stand.

    • @juliafox52
      @juliafox52 Před 4 lety +3

      @@hellogoodbye4061 Out of curiosity, what school district are your kids in?

    • @hellogoodbye4061
      @hellogoodbye4061 Před 4 lety +6

      @@juliafox52 I believe the teacher, female of course, set up this visit for the STEM students and that her heart was in the right place, but twisted by feminism that girls are somehow oppressed as the reason they do not enter the sciences, so naturally only girls should have been present for this "go into STEM" pep talk......which is simply not true, if anything, girls are encouraged to no end to pursue every field imaginable.

    • @zerobyte802
      @zerobyte802 Před 4 lety +5

      "It's cool when girls do it."
      When you get right down to it, that's actually insulting and/or insidious.
      If women are equally capable as men, then it should be completely un-noteworthy when they do something. So it's either an inverse way of saying that women aren't as good as men, or else it's a means to reverse the "power structure" and have women dominate men in everything. I see neither case as noble.

  • @alfredtherien7791
    @alfredtherien7791 Před 4 lety +2

    So glad to hear from you after such a long hiatus! I’m a musicologist who has for a long time been intrigued by this whole blind audition question, given the lack of sexism I’ve always observed in most musicians, and in the music world (both classical and jazz) in general. Since learning, in the past few years-from you, at first, then from my own research-about the excesses of Feminism, my confusion has only increased. The refreshing news you bring us in this clip is a welcome resolution to the tension, and I find myself once more in a state of ‘cognitive consonance’. Thank you. And I do hope you will continue to enlighten us on a regular basis.

  • @Mrs.Silversmith
    @Mrs.Silversmith Před 4 lety +3

    Blind auditions or blind judging is still a good idea where there is some subjective evaluation going on. Good examples are cooking, art, music, creative writing, etc. In each of these the prospective judges could be influenced to like a person more because they resemble themselves in some way or because they have some type of notoriety. Blind judging is helpful to use in these situations where possible.

  • @stephensodyssey7423
    @stephensodyssey7423 Před 4 lety +19

    If women worked the same hours as men over life span: they would have the same pay.

    • @killianmiller6107
      @killianmiller6107 Před 4 lety +5

      I dare say with all the preferential treatment that women get, they may actually make more.

    • @Furzkampfbomber
      @Furzkampfbomber Před 4 lety +5

      @Killian Miller
      Well, in Canada right now construction workers are pissed, at least the male ones. Because feminists realised that there are not many women on construction sites and instead of wondering _why_ the fuck that is, the canadian solution was to hire women as the ones holding shields and redirecting the traffic.
      And while the men are _still_ doing all the hard and dangerous and, not to forget, qualified work, women are just standing there with shields in their hands, get to call themselfes "construction worker" and... make more money than the men. Rumour has it that the productivity on construction sites dramatically decreases for some strange reason when such female "construction workers" are present.

    • @celia-ov6rm
      @celia-ov6rm Před 4 lety

      Women are also less willing to travel for work and also less willing to ask for a pay raise (men ask for it 8 times more than women)

  • @N7sensei
    @N7sensei Před 4 lety +2

    Long time no see. Welcome back!

  • @michaelrose1927
    @michaelrose1927 Před 4 lety +4

    Christina: "Truth matters"
    CZcams: Video demonetized.

  • @bandgeekforlife406
    @bandgeekforlife406 Před 4 lety +5

    Orchestral musicians tend to be a nervous bunch to begin with. I wouldn't be surprised if blind auditions help BOTH genders to perform better, because they can pretend no one is watching them. (This is an issue for people who aren't soloists, but are fine playing in front of others if they are part of a group. I'm not a pro, but I did try out for regional honor band and state honor band in high school, and I know that the screen in between us made the audition a *lot* easier for me. I talked to some of the other clarinetists, and they felt the same.) Long story short: you might get better quality musicians (regardless of gender) using the screens.

  • @NomenNescio99
    @NomenNescio99 Před 4 lety +2

    I work in IT.
    The groups at a previous employer handled recruitment themselves.
    The HR department of course assumed we all were raving mad sexists. They demanded that all CVs should be anonymous to remove any bias against women.
    The method was quickly abandoned shortly after it was introduced. It turned out that the amount of female applicants called to attend interviews dropped from 30% to almost zero with anonymous CVs.
    In reality we all had a very strong bias for recruiting women - not against.
    And apparently that was OK according to HR.

  • @eggsnspam
    @eggsnspam Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you for this! I've been citing blind audition to remove gender bias and basically focus on performance (best man/woman for the job!) but I guess it wasn't that simple either. Good to know.

  • @tonycatman
    @tonycatman Před 4 lety +4

    This isn't the only myth that Gladwell popularized. He's also responsible for selling the idea of unconscious bias.

    • @HiVizCamo
      @HiVizCamo Před 4 lety

      He has become unreadable.

    •  Před 4 lety

      @@HiVizCamo and yet he is a darling of the Liberals, esp the academics.

  • @galaxytrio
    @galaxytrio Před 4 lety

    Worth watching, as usual. I would subscribe, but that gets me all AEI's videos, which I don't want. Please consider giving TFF its own channel.

  • @guesswho22peekaboo
    @guesswho22peekaboo Před 4 lety +1

    Very interesting! I'd heard of this study before but never read it. I'll have to do that now so I can come to my own conclusion!

  • @catwoman4919
    @catwoman4919 Před 4 lety +22

    Based mom still at it.

    • @gregcarlson8438
      @gregcarlson8438 Před 4 lety

      Cat Woman based on what?

    • @catwoman4919
      @catwoman4919 Před 4 lety +7

      @@gregcarlson8438 Its a meme dude.Calling someone "based" is a meme....We call her "mom." "Based mom." Its a complement.

    • @roca967
      @roca967 Před 4 lety

      When I think of 'based' I think "based in reality", or "feet on the ground". So much nonsense is like a vague whiff in the wind, cobwebs of theories that kinda sound plausible and we might buy into them despite everything we see.
      The opposite term seems to be 'woke', which seems to me to be saying "awoken to identity politics", and I think is like saying "a waking dream", or nightmare.

    • @hornkraft9438
      @hornkraft9438 Před 4 lety +1

      Maybe she doubles on bass?

    • @gregcarlson8438
      @gregcarlson8438 Před 4 lety +3

      Cat Woman I was genuinely asking what you meant. Now that I know it was a meme, I looked it up and see it means being yourself and not caring what others think.

  • @dragonhold4
    @dragonhold4 Před 4 lety +2

    (3:07) _Still some may think it seems obvious that the screens contributed to equal hiring, but it's not. The screens may have been a reflection of changing attitudes - and it was those attitudes, not the screens, that helped women._
    > Correlation v. Causation strikes again...

  • @spartan1857
    @spartan1857 Před 2 lety

    This is really good. I hope there are more videos in the future.

  • @YuriPavlov
    @YuriPavlov Před 4 lety

    THE DOG AT THE END! Love it

  • @JordanCarterTrombone
    @JordanCarterTrombone Před 4 lety +3

    I studied trombone performance at university. There are few women that play this instrument, compared to men (perhaps due to its size), and I did notice that one girl managed to make it into the orchestra every year. My instructor was on the audition committee, and he told me that he knows what I sound like (so he could tell it was me even though there was a screen up), and that I should have made it in to the orchestra, and that he thought the girl did not perform as well as I did during the audition. Yet, she got the spot, and I didn't. I think it's because the university wanted to keep up with an image of gender diversity. It really wasn't fair for me, as I feel that this opportunity was taken away from me. I try not to let this define my life, as I have since moved on into a different vocation and am happy, but that doesn't take away from the injustice at hand.

    • @yumeN0dengon
      @yumeN0dengon Před 9 měsíci

      How do you get from your instructor recognizing you in spite of the screen to an entire committee knowingly selecting one of the few female candidates through a blind audition?

  • @JobiWan144
    @JobiWan144 Před 4 lety +3

    You should put Izzie in the thumbnail for more views. He (she?) is very cute!

  • @DoomRulz
    @DoomRulz Před 4 lety +56

    I knew a fish that wanted to be a musician. But it just couldn't hit the right tuna.

    • @plipogamez3173
      @plipogamez3173 Před 4 lety

      Do you live in the bush?

    • @JimC
      @JimC Před 4 lety +4

      It wanted to be a musician because the pay scale is pretty good.

    • @ChollieD
      @ChollieD Před 4 lety +4

      You can tune a piano, but you can't tuna fish.--Plato, I think

    • @hornkraft9438
      @hornkraft9438 Před 4 lety

      It must have been a drummer ...

    • @Jianju69
      @Jianju69 Před 4 lety +2

      They hired him anyway, but they only paid him sick squid.

  • @ExtremelyTastyBread
    @ExtremelyTastyBread Před 4 lety +1

    I read about this study in Malcolm Gladwell's Blink some years ago, and now here I am learning that it's more complicated that that

  • @juliuscaesar3374
    @juliuscaesar3374 Před 3 lety

    You are the first feminist that I have seen, on the Internet that in my opinion brings the debate over how to achieve equality fowrward, thanks for beeing so objective and making such a good vodeo :)

  • @scottalbers2518
    @scottalbers2518 Před 4 lety +1

    The trick is to see that the limitation in the article is as to the PRELIMINARY rounds. The goal is to get the very best of the best. Apparently these higher levels of competitive power are not even confronted by the study itself. It's like saying that we can help women compete in the Men's 100 yard dash by forcing the inclusion of women at the first cut. It's not the first cut which will really determine much, or even anything. It's the last cut, and the next to last cut, which really separates the best from the almost best. If the article won't confront this, it really has only confronted the middling nowhere.

  • @davidmaclean2076
    @davidmaclean2076 Před 4 lety +2

    "...Once the curtain dropped, the case study shows that the number of women who were selected doubled - they went up 50 percent."
    It's hard to trust anyone who thinks a 50% increase doubles the number. A 50% increase in quantity 1 is 1.5; in quantity 10 is 15; and in quantity 100 is 150. On the other hand, a doubling of quantity 1 is 2; of quantity 10 is 20; and of quantity 100 is 200.
    There *IS* a percentage increase the equivalent of doubling and that is 100%. A 100% increase in quantity 1 is 2; in quantity 10 is 20; and in quantity 100 is 200.
    If the person who said that the quantity doubled - increase 50%, then they are deficient in middle school arithmetic and can hardly be trusted to comment on, let alone verify, a thesis that depends on statistics.

  • @annatardlordofderps9181
    @annatardlordofderps9181 Před 4 lety +1

    I suggest blind screens in most jobs in order to prevent positive bias towards women that could alienate more capable men. There was a study out of Australia that found in STEM women were significantly less likely to be hired for a position when the employer didn't know they were women, showing a significant positive bias towards women in STEM fields.
    Plus address _The Scully Effect_ that another bit of "rigorous feminist research" that get easily toppled when you realize Mulder and Scully are both FBI agents(law enforcement not a STEM field) and what the researchers found was an atypical trend of women liking Sci-Fi also pursuing STEM fields, not the "representation" they think Scully embodies. You can also use the fact that the portion of women in STEM was significantly higher before _The X-Files_ run than during or since.

  • @justinmalinowski
    @justinmalinowski Před 4 lety

    Omg. Thank you. I had always been stumped by that argument. No more :)

  • @mjs28s
    @mjs28s Před 4 lety +1

    @ 4:42
    The genius behind the quote "...Once the curtain dropped, the case stud shows that the number of women who were selected doubled -- they went up 50 percent."
    Clearly she, Banaji, didn't even minor in a STEM field.
    If anyone happens to not see the issue, double something is increasing it 100%.

  • @miguelpuyoch
    @miguelpuyoch Před 3 lety

    I came for a friend's recommendation. Thank you for share it! I was pessimistic about to turn points on modern feminist agenda. We have a long way to walk for a real equality society. But support the debate in scientific data bring to me a renewed interest.

  • @Miatacrosser
    @Miatacrosser Před 4 lety

    I always enjoyed your times on Dennis Prager's show. His Male/Female hour was always interesting and you were a large part of that.

  • @ilikefacts114
    @ilikefacts114 Před 4 lety

    Great episode!! Can you do an episode about toxic masculinity research?

  • @ModeratelyAmused
    @ModeratelyAmused Před 4 lety +2

    "the number of women selected doubled ... they went up 50 percent" One probably shouldn't reference statistics if they can't do basic math.

  • @flutefreak8290
    @flutefreak8290 Před 3 lety

    Okay, a VERY important piece of information would be helpful regarding when these scholars/scientists went back and read the whole study. For the semifinal rounds mentioned, were these also screened or not?

  • @matthindle5037
    @matthindle5037 Před 4 lety +2

    Where can we read the scholarly criticism of the original study?

  • @PaleyDaley
    @PaleyDaley Před 4 lety +1

    At time 4:42. How exactly is going up by 50 percent "doubling"? Am I missing something?

  • @aniellofico2478
    @aniellofico2478 Před 2 lety

    hey do you guys think you can have Christina Hoff Sommers do a video about this article please.

  • @jeice13
    @jeice13 Před 4 lety +2

    Maybe they could have had to panels of judges for each audition 1 with and without screens? Then comparing the results would give you a really good idea of the effect

  • @vulkanofnocturne
    @vulkanofnocturne Před 4 lety +4

    Cute! The dog is adorable as well.

  • @wetdroidedition2549
    @wetdroidedition2549 Před 4 lety +1

    This question or argument is a bit trite but still true: if women earn less than men doing the same job then why were there few women in orchestras? This is really economically significant!

  • @williamhoover6902
    @williamhoover6902 Před 4 lety

    Thank you for your leadership so needed.....

  • @online4videos
    @online4videos Před 4 lety +2

    At 4:38 she critiques someone whose math is so bad that they think a 50% increase is the same a being Doubled (So, basically, they think that a 50% increase is the same as a 100% increase, OK then!).

  • @markharris1223
    @markharris1223 Před 3 lety

    I have only recently discovered this lady's channel. It is a breath of fresh air. I wish her well in her quest to create equality of opportunity using objective truth rather than the sophistry which is afflicting our society.

  • @KimMilvang
    @KimMilvang Před 4 lety

    What I find troubling, is that you have a study that people seem to find significant, but no one attempts to replicate it. I was hoping when you said that the situation had changed that someone had finally tried to replicate the experiment.

  • @microcolonel
    @microcolonel Před 4 lety +1

    I always found the popular conclusions of this study to be interesting, and it sounded plausible enough that I never really checked.

    • @JNYC-gb1pp
      @JNYC-gb1pp Před 4 lety +1

      Lies are always rooted in a grain of truth - but sprout off into utter lies.

  • @peterg7516
    @peterg7516 Před 4 lety

    I love the dog at the end, amazing.

  • @andyiswonderful
    @andyiswonderful Před 4 lety

    I love your scientific approach, being a scientist myself. Maybe social "scientists" need to take a few courses in statistics and data analysis.

  • @theantitheocrat6232
    @theantitheocrat6232 Před 4 lety +1

    Take a look at the ABC (Australia) and their reply to the failure of their experiment. The reply is the thing people should have questioned more.

  • @wendyleeconnelly2939
    @wendyleeconnelly2939 Před 4 lety

    Good video. Good points. Adorable doggie! 8-D

  • @donm1612
    @donm1612 Před rokem

    This points out how bad studies trickle down and inform entire careers and policies. There should be a way to pull back not just the primary research but all the research that references it. That would make researchers actually try to replicate results rather than just pull together articles that support their thesis. As Bret Weinstein has pointed out, statistical studies are exceedingly hard to do correctly in the social sciences because there are so many variables.

  • @Clipped_Angel
    @Clipped_Angel Před 3 lety

    Could you please pick up the series again?
    I just binge watched the entire 5 seasons of the series and i would love to see more

  • @alvagoldbook2
    @alvagoldbook2 Před 4 lety

    I was in a high school orchestra in the mid 90’s and worked my way up to be the best bassist in the county, at least at the high school level. We did screen auditions back then. But everyone knew who belonged in the first chair. With the exception of the bassists, which wasn’t popular with the girls due to the instrument size, the first chair was always a girl, especially when it came to the violins. Quite frankly these girls were the only ones that I was ever excited to play with because they weren’t awful like the rest of the kids. I went on to play in multiple bands, and I always loved playing with girls. The only thing that really matters is your ability to perform. If you’re awesome on your instrument then everyone wants to play with you. That’s just how it is. It was even that way back in the 40’s and 50’s in country music and bluegrass, hardly what I’d call a group of people particularly inclined towards diversity. I know this because my father played in a bluegrass band and there was always a longing to play music with girls. The main reason why you see fewer girls excel in music has nothing to do with discrimination and everything to do with most girl musicians never dedicating themselves or having the ambition to be truly great. To give the non musicians some sense of what it takes to truly master an instrument, you’ve got to practice 4 hours a day 4-5 times a week for 4-5 years.

  • @ThatsMrMoronToYou
    @ThatsMrMoronToYou Před 4 lety

    How do they read music and take cues from the conductor?

  • @gunbutter830
    @gunbutter830 Před 4 lety +1

    The Australians tried 'blind auditions' (resumes and application without gender) and found, to their dismay, that men were even more likely to be hired.

  • @nunyabisnass1141
    @nunyabisnass1141 Před 4 lety +1

    I thought any improvement was attributed to alleviating performamce anxiety?

  • @amlecciones
    @amlecciones Před 4 lety +1

    You're a gem, FF.
    ❤️, a conservative.

  • @Ostsol
    @Ostsol Před 4 lety +1

    An interesting survey question in such a study would be whether the screens alleviated musicians' anxieties, allowing them to perform better in the initial auditions.

    • @JNYC-gb1pp
      @JNYC-gb1pp Před 4 lety

      Wonder if there are stats on how many of those screened musicians were later fired after less-than-stellar performances in front of an audience?

    • @Ostsol
      @Ostsol Před 4 lety

      @@JNYC-gb1pp I think that most people who play in orchestras already have plenty of experience in front of audiences. I never even considered joining the city's orchestra, but I had six years of music in school, including five concurrent years with an all-city ensemble and a week at band-camp. That's a lot of Christmas concerts and other festivals... Playing within a big ensemble isn't bad (unless you've been roped into a solo), but one-on-one auditions with the conductor can be nerve-wracking.

    • @JNYC-gb1pp
      @JNYC-gb1pp Před 4 lety +1

      @@Ostsol I'm just saying IF there is a possibility that nerves could be the cause, then eliminating it by looking at that data would reduce your possible cause to also examine and eliminate. The more cause you eliminate, the closer you get to the actual reason why women actually suddenly started joining orchestras and not this speculative and politically motivated cherry picking.

  • @Apriluser
    @Apriluser Před 4 lety +1

    I heard that the sound of the auditioner’s footsteps across the stage could give away whether a man or woman was auditioning. So they had to audition in stocking feet. 🙄

  • @UtarEmpire
    @UtarEmpire Před 4 lety +1

    Music to my ears

  • @expressionofwill5307
    @expressionofwill5307 Před 4 lety

    I have missed these vids

  • @hongyichen0611
    @hongyichen0611 Před 6 měsíci

    As a Data Analyst, this is called data overfitting, where the scale of the data is too small, or the data is biased itself.

  • @jonvalentine8109
    @jonvalentine8109 Před 4 lety +2

    Rather proved the opposite. That even when people can see the musician they can judge in a fair manner most of the time.

  • @jennasink8743
    @jennasink8743 Před 4 lety

    I had seen this myth on Pinterest, and I have to admit to being fooled by this one. Thanks for clearing it up for me!

  • @MamaMOB
    @MamaMOB Před 4 lety +1

    4:44 which is it? Did they double or did they go up by 50%? Those two things aren’t the same. Doubling is going up by 100%.

  • @SanjeevSharma-vk1yo
    @SanjeevSharma-vk1yo Před 4 lety

    There was a recent study blinding resumes in STEM - female sounding names got a 6% benefit.
    after the results showed women benefit asymmetrically the authors said blinding should NOT be used to achieve fairness. (from memory - exact numbers and wording probably differed)

  • @wurumburner5106
    @wurumburner5106 Před 4 lety +1

    4:45 "the number of women selected doubled - they went up 50%." Isn't doubling going up 100%?

  • @drednaught608
    @drednaught608 Před 4 lety +1

    like her or hate her she's spitting straight facts

  • @presterjohn7789
    @presterjohn7789 Před 8 měsíci

    I know studies out there show overall, violins and violas are performed in orchestras by about 50:50 male:female. So when some orchestras boast of 90% women violinists to help make up 50% of the overall orchestra, I have very significant reason to believe some are committing gender discrimination against violinists who happen to be male.

  • @rrp2600
    @rrp2600 Před 4 lety

    Carpe Datum! I am so gonna use that.

  • @anthonymcglinch7503
    @anthonymcglinch7503 Před 4 lety +4

    Based mom is baaaaaaaaaaaack!
    In my recommendations.

  • @Svr2021playit
    @Svr2021playit Před 4 lety +6

    GILF Based Mom is at it again.

  • @angelinalim4980
    @angelinalim4980 Před 4 lety

    My violin teacher said she passed her orchestra audition because of her postures when she played violin. Even though she chose little bit easier music than others.

  • @ferbr7242
    @ferbr7242 Před 4 lety

    Christina, thank you so much for your effort to find the truth about gender issues. You really contribute to create a better world both for men and women.

  • @andyik9009
    @andyik9009 Před 4 lety +26

    If more feminists were like this woman, then i would totally support them.

    • @celia-ov6rm
      @celia-ov6rm Před 4 lety +2

      Me too. I usually say that I am anti-feminist (even though I am a woman); but if feminism were like this (like it was in the 60s-70s-80s), then I'd agree with it. However, our actual 3rd wave of feminism is awful... just awful!

  • @a_channel2545
    @a_channel2545 Před 4 lety

    Honestly, I do support blind auditions for orchestras, but not for gender reasons, strictly for the purpose of each orchestra finding the best musicians. Whether or not the amount of women goes up, I’d like to know that the musicians were chosen strictly because they can play their instruments well. I’m not sure this kind of screening process can be as easily implemented in other industries though.

  • @antoniosarzi3636
    @antoniosarzi3636 Před 4 lety

    As a Conservatory student, this is very interesting

  • @vaughanellis7866
    @vaughanellis7866 Před 4 lety

    Anonymised recruitment was tried by the civil service in the UK and Australia where the results ended up with even more men being recruited than through the “Biased panels” with the result of anonymised recruitment being dropped almost immediately as it did not meet expectations of certain parties.

  • @educationalramblings6826
    @educationalramblings6826 Před 3 měsíci

    I had heard years ago about this type of study and there was no change, but then they realized that they could guess male or female by the sound of the shoes, as women tended to wear heals. They then have them walk out barefoot.... Did anyone hear of this?
    Now..... I do believe in gender bias agaisnt women is still an issue

  • @balthazarbeutelwolf9097
    @balthazarbeutelwolf9097 Před 4 lety +1

    I don't like the "yes, it does" vs. "no, it does not" kind of academic debates; that's at the level of children's pantomimes. If the original study was based on small sample sizes, and subsequent studies showed different results, could we have citations please? How small was the sample size of the original study, what were their implied error intervals? What did (which) subsequent studies show? I don't find it hard to believe that people are too uncritically embracing a study that fits their narrative - however, that does not mean it is wrong either, and for a counterclaim I would want to see a better foundation than a mixture of hearsay and vague references to disclaimers in the study.

  • @peace-yv4qd
    @peace-yv4qd Před 4 lety

    When in doubt, make it up.

  • @bwake
    @bwake Před 4 lety

    I would like see processes that eliminate discrimination on criteria irrelevant to the job at hand, rather than setting quotas
    That is why I liked the blind auditions. They are an effort to focus on the relevant and leave out the irrelevant.

  • @JW-dp1bs
    @JW-dp1bs Před 3 lety +1

    I do not know why she calls herself a feminist. She sounds like a human being, telling the truth about something. A feminist implies she believes women should be given a position and power simply because they are a woman, not because they deserve it, the female equivalent of a male misogynist.

  • @OrquestraArteViva
    @OrquestraArteViva Před 4 lety

    Could it be due to the fact that since the screens were used since the first rounds of selection, more women passed, therefore, they were not outnumbered by men in the other rounds? The study had to go over and check how many women actually applied and passed... before and after the use of screens. How many women musicians were there in the 40's, 50's, 60's, and 70's, compared to the 80's forward?