Scottish Daily Mail

Fairer sex? Women are sexist – against other women

- By Victoria Allen Science Correspond­ent

BOTH sexes are less likely to recommend a woman for a job if it requires ‘brilliance’, according to a study.

It also found girls aged five to seven were less likely to pick females for their team when told to choose ‘smart’ children.

The study led by New York University asked more than 1,150 people to recommend two candidates for a job.

They were shown one advert requiring ‘superior reasoning skills’, ‘brilliance’ and ‘big, bold ideas’, and another seeking ‘highly motivated’ candidates with an ‘outstandin­g work ethic’.

Men were less likely to choose women when the job was advertised as requiring intelligen­ce, but surprising­ly so were women.

The proportion of recommenda­tions for women made by men fell from 33 per cent to 31 per cent for the ‘intelligen­t’ job.

Two-thirds of women recommende­d other women for the ‘work ethic’ job, but this fell to 54 per cent when the position required ‘brilliance’.

Similar results were seen in an experiment among 192 children, according to the study in the journal American Psychologi­st.

Senior study author Dr Andrei Cimpian said: ‘Women are members of our culture just like men are and they are not immune to the gendered associatio­ns that our culture attaches to the notions of brilliance and genius.’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom