The Boston College School of Social Work has launched a new research and training program to improve equity in the workplace for women, people of color, and other marginalized employees.听
Organizers say the primary goal of the Work Equity initiative is to develop solutions to combat the root causes of racial, ethnic, and gender biases that are baked into job structures and employment practices.听
The initiative, they say, aligns with the school鈥檚 mission to promote equity, justice, and inclusion and builds on the creation of a certificate program that prepares master鈥檚 students to direct EJI programs in the public and private sectors.听
鈥淲e feel called to change the conversation around what workplace equity looks like,鈥 says assistant professor Samuel Bradley, Jr., who teamed up with professor emerita Marcie Pitt-Catsouphes and faculty fellow Kathleen Christensen to create the initiative. 鈥淎s scholars and teachers, we have a special obligation to inspire the next generation of diversity, equity, and inclusion practitioners, HR professionals, and organizational leaders to see how much things like job structures and employment systems truly impact the lives of workers.鈥
Studies show that inequity is a common feature at workplaces across the U.S., from the factory floor to the C-suite. Only 41 out of the top 500 companies in the country are . Black people make 62 cents for every dollar a . And job applicants with 鈥渢ypically white鈥 names than those with 鈥渢ypically Black鈥 names.听
Organizers say the COVID-19 pandemic laid bare these inequities and fundamentally changed the composition of the workforce, making their initiative particularly timely. As a case in point, women鈥檚 participation in the labor force in 2021, as the pandemic continued to push women out of jobs.
鈥淚n many ways, the disparate impact of COVID-19 links directly to the workplace,鈥 says Bradley, who studies the future of work. 鈥淭he pandemic fundamentally changed assumptions about how work gets done, when work gets done, where work gets done鈥攁nd who is an essential worker in the U.S. economy.鈥
“As scholars and teachers, we have a special obligation to inspire the next generation of diversity, equity, and inclusion practitioners, HR professionals, and organizational leaders to see how much things like job structures and employment systems truly impact the lives of workers”
The initiative is taking a three-pronged approach to tackle inequity in the workplace. Pitt-Catsouphes says the team is conducting groundbreaking research on the state of workplace equity; partnering with employers and frontline employees to address inequities in select organizations; and creating a database for employers that makes equity-related publications easily accessible. Findings from their studies, she says, will eventually inform the development of the Workplace Equity Benchmarking Tool, which will enable employers to compare equity at their organizations to progress reported by their peers.
鈥淚ntegrating these different components enables us to become a true research to practice and practice to research enterprise,鈥 says Pitt-Catsouphes, who co-founded the Center on Aging and Work at Boston College in 2005. 鈥淲e research our practice concerns and then our research findings go back into the practice.鈥
The initiative, housed in the school鈥檚 Center for Social Innovation, teamed up with the to survey nearly 200 local organizations in fall 2021. As part of the 鈥淏oston Workplace Equity Study,鈥 the co-founders asked employers more than 100 questions related to the pressures facing their organizations, the perceived equity of their policies, and the availability of flexible work arrangements.听
They found that most companies had adopted strategies to create and sustain equity at the workplace. Many employers, for example, had 鈥嬧媠pecified the steps they would take to ensure that recruitment and hiring for open positions is fair and unbiased, without regard to demographic or social identities. More than 40 percent of employers said that they give all or almost all their employees the option to work from home either occasionally or regularly. And nearly 30 percent of all respondents said that they give all or almost all workers control over their weekly schedules.听
鈥淭he COVID-19 pandemic has brought renewed attention to the benefits that flexible job structures can offer to employees and employers,鈥 the organizers for the American Society on Aging following the study. 鈥淔urther research will help to examine how employee access to flexible job structures may align with organizations鈥 equity initiatives and might mitigate against the precipitous withdrawal of some older workers from the labor force.鈥
Christensen says the team plans to expand the reach of its next survey, collecting data from a nationally representative sample of employers in the spring. The initiative has partnered with the , the world鈥檚 largest HR association, and , an independent social research organization, to carry out the survey, which is being funded by a $92,000 grant from , a research-to-action network on jobs, workers, and mobility hosted by the .听
SHRM will find the employers for the survey, which organizers hope to replicate with the same group of participants every few years, and help the initiative share the findings. NORC, founded in 1941 as the National Opinion Research Center, will administer the survey.
鈥淲e鈥檒l be able to measure change over time,鈥 says Christensen, who helped to plan and execute the 2010 White House Forum on Workplace Flexibility and the 2014 White House Summit on Working Families. 鈥淢ost diversity, equity and inclusion efforts have not focused on how organizational systems and job structures have inequities embedded in them,鈥 she adds. 鈥淭o advance equity at the workplace, we have to look at when, where, and how work is done, as well as formal policies and informal practices, to identify the sources of inequities and find solutions.鈥
As the survey results come in, Bradley will be working with the United Way of Massachusetts Bay and Merrimack Valley to identify and address the root causes of inequities at the nonprofit. The partnership will mark the launch of the initiative鈥檚 鈥淓quity Innovation Lab,鈥 wherein Bradley and an innovation coach will team up with a small group of employees at select companies, one at a time, to test a policy or practice to address inequity in those workplaces.
鈥淲e鈥檙e giving people an opportunity to pull apart their current practices and put them back together again in a way that they believe will create more equitable workplaces,鈥 says Bradley.
The labs will be split up into five, 90-minute sessions that will take place over the course of several months. The first two sessions will focus on identifying problems and brainstorming solutions. Employees will then share their solutions with their colleagues, return to Bradley to further refine their ideas in sessions three and four, and implement their new policies or practices at their companies. After three months, the groups will reconvene for the fifth and final session to reflect on their progress. To gauge how the programs affected workplace equity, the organizers will conduct before-and-after surveys of the participants.听
Christensen says the team鈥檚 conversations with leaders of state and regional Chambers of Commerce helped to shape the various parts of the initiative. 鈥淲hat we heard repeatedly from the representatives of these chambers was that equity was a real focus for businesses, but they didn鈥檛 always know what to do and they didn鈥檛 always know what others were doing,鈥 she says. 鈥淎nd so that really drove our commitment to developing the employer resources and the Equity Innovation Labs.鈥
Employers will soon be able to visit the initiative鈥檚 website to find a curated library of work equity publications, case studies, and survey findings. Dubbed the 鈥淲ork Equity Knowledgebase,鈥 the site will also include the benchmarking tool, findings from the Equity Innovation Lab, and a collection of promising equity practices.听聽
鈥淎ll sorts of entities, both public and private, produce reports on the state of work and workplace equity. And oftentimes it can be difficult to gain access to those things or know where to go to find the most up to date sources,鈥 says Bradley. 鈥淥ur job is, as we see it, to create a clearinghouse for accessible employer resources, as well as research highlights and innovative case studies that come out of the knowledge we generate.鈥澛
The results of the first Equity Innovation Lab, with the United Way of Massachusetts Bay and Merrimack Valley, will become part of the knowledgebase next fall. Karen Groce-Horan, the senior director of diversity, equity, and inclusion priorities at the United Way鈥檚 chapter in Greater Boston, says that a diverse group of eight employees at the nonprofit will take part in the lab in an effort to 鈥渆mbed equity into our organizational practices and really move our culture forward.鈥澛
鈥淲e want to look intentionally at how we鈥檙e doing things,鈥 she says, 鈥渁nd how we can do things better.鈥
One of her primary goals for the lab is to come up with a strategy to increase the number of employees who are invested in creating a diverse and inclusive culture. 鈥淚t really is about shifting, changing, and moving structures that have marginalized and oppressed. And that鈥檚 been key to looking at how we, as an organization, move differently,鈥 she says. 鈥淥ne of my basic goals is to bring more people to the work. I also think it鈥檚 going to help us think creatively about bringing change to our organization that really moves us along.鈥
So, what makes a workplace truly equitable? Bradley says that good communication lies at the heart of the equitable workplace, adding that employees should be able to articulate the purpose of their collective mission.听
鈥淎 place that is filled with equity and justice is both a healing space and a productive space,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t is a space that moves with a sense of purpose, where all employees work together and understand that purpose.鈥