Dear Andrea:
I have a pregnant friend with a very responsible job. When
she found out she was pregnant, she debated whether to tell
her employer. "I don't know how they'll take it," she said,
as we discussed possible repercussions. So for the next
five months she's decided to wear oversized clothing to
hide her pregnancy.
--Concerned Friend
Dear Concerned:
She has cause for concern. The "maternal wall" is "an
invisible yet powerful, impediment to a woman's ability
to successfully merge ambition and nurturing," says Deborah
J. Swiss, author of Women Breaking Through (Pacesetter
Books). It's a bias that can stall, even derail a career.
And there's plenty evidence it exists.
Students at DePaul University were asked to rate a videotaped
job performance of the same woman, pregnant for half of
the students and not pregnant for the other half. The pregnant
employee was consistently rated lower.
An eight-month pregnant woman was nominated for a high-ranking
position in Massachusetts. One of the men who would vote
on her appointment asked publicly, "'What are you? Superman?
The most important thing is that little baby and the family...I
think you're overextending yourself.'"
Many times this labeling continues long after a child
is born. A woman away on her twelve-week leave called the
office to check on a project and was told she would no
longer be working on it when she returned, even though
she had successfully managed it for two years.
When she returned, even though she worked harder to regain
her position, her responsibilities were cut back. She moved
to another branch. "I didn't bring up the fact that I had
two children...and was given lots of great business opportunities."
A female attorney told about a weekly group meeting where
attendance is expected. After one meeting that she and
the only other woman in the group didn't attend (they were
both in court), the supervising partner sent them memos
asking where they were--something he had never asked of
men who missed meetings. "I confronted him about his assumption
that we must have had child-care problems. I had to account
for myself while the men were assumed to be legitimately
busy with something else."
Women who leave work to deal with family matters get penalized.
One woman who got rave reviews of her work was told her
numeric rating would be lowered from a "5" to a "4" because
she left work early twice in two years to pick up her sick
child (even though she took home a briefcase of work.)
The next time her child was sick, she claimed an illness
herself.
Those are instances of why some women make a conscious
decision to hide their status as a mother--or feel they
must lie. A cop-out or a survival tactic? asks Swiss.
A woman must challenge the assumptions of what a mother
should be, where she should spend her time and how she
should lead her life to prevent these assumptions from
undermining career potential, Swiss says.
Women also can't wait for the maternal wall to crumble
on its own. Become advocates and initiate alternative,
more flexible work arrangements as company policy. Then
you need to:
- Conduct periodic check-ins. Ask your boss and personnel, "Has
there been any feedback that this isn't working? How
are my coworkers reacting?"
- Put in writing a detailed description of your new working
arrangement. Suggest a review of the arrangement in six
months; say you'll revert to a traditional schedule after
a trial period if you can't meet the demands of the job.
- Refuse to let a flexible work arrangement push you
off the career radar screen. Walk the halls. Let people
know you're alive.
- Showcase your performance at every chance.
- Look for and expect no favors. Be the first to see
if your arrangement is working for everyone.
- Don't apologize for developing an option that's right
for you.
- Don't carry any guilt about leaving at a set time.
- Assume the role of corporate educator for putting family-friendly
policies into practice. Put in writing a plan for a leave,
work reentry or a nontraditional schedule.
© by Andrea Kay
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