Expert on equity issues to speak at NAWIC Annual Conference

“If you want to bring in more women to construction, you have to acknowledge the issues of why women have not been in the field in the past,” says Dr. Rhianna Rogers, adding, “These are things like not feeling included and stereotypical issues of it being a male-dominated field.” Dr. Rogers is an archaeologist, a university professor and director of the Center to Advance Racial Equity Policy at the RAND Corporation, with a specialty in studying equity issues in the US and globally. She will be the featured keynote speaker at the National Association of Women in Construction (NAWIC) Annual Conferencetaking place August 9-12 in Portland, Oregon. The theme of the conference is “Many Paths. One Mission.” Dr. Rogers recently shared some of the concepts she will be talking about in her keynote address.

A commonly held concept in diversity, equity and inclusion (DE&I) thinking is that change has to come from the top of an organization. Dr. Rogers agrees with this statement but adds to it noting, “It can’t just come from the top, it has to come from the top, middle and bottom.” For a company to be successful, she says, it has to develop trusted messengers who can connect with stakeholders at all levels.

Dr. Rogers says that sharing from the top down and back up again allows women to feel safer when talking about their experiences, good or bad, or about why they stay or leave. Creating that psychological safety to enter an industry gives more opportunity for growth and healing. She notes, “Women have to be willing to ask questions of their employers on how they’ve addressed issues of retention in the past, what policies are in place to make sure stereotypical behaviors won’t continue, and to hold their organization accountable to make sure what they’re saying publicly about their efforts match up with the behaviors inside the organization.”

She goes further, “That cyclical process is important if you want to see retention increased. If you develop a space where someone feels heard, they buy into the organization more because they feel like they are part of it. Then the company needs to close the loop: In other words, ‘We heard your story and here’s what we’re going to do about it.’”

Lauline Mitchell, president of NAWIC, concurs with Dr. Rogers’ comments. “NAWIC is dedicated to attracting more women to the construction industry and helping develop them into leaders in their field,” Mitchell says. “The ‘Many Paths. One Mission.’ theme of our annual conference is meant to reflect that there are many options for women in construction, but also that we have a long way to go toward reaching equity that Dr. Rogers is talking about.”

Mitchell is right about the potential for women in construction. Women at all levels of construction, from the trades up to senior management, represent about 11 to 13 percent of the total workforce in the industry. Those numbers are higher in some areas of the country, sometimes reaching 17 to 18%, but overall, the numbers are still pointing to the unrealized potential of including more women in the industry. Still, Mitchell is optimistic, “Why not 50/50?” she says, pointing out that the industry is looking to fill many positions. “More women in construction can certainly help solve our labor shortage problems and other issues confronting the industry.”

About NAWIC

The National Association of Women in Construction (NAVIC) originated as Women in Construction of Fort Worth, Texas. Sixteen women working in the construction industry founded it in 1953 to create a support network for women in construction-related jobs. Today, NAWIC is still based in Fort Worth and has 118 chapters throughout the United States that provide professional development, education, networking, leadership training and public service.

Note: This article have been indexed to our site. We do not claim legitimacy, ownership or copyright of any of the content above. To see the article at original source Click Here

Related Posts
‎Saudi Arabia records 5,628 COVID-19 cases on Friday thumbnail

‎Saudi Arabia records 5,628 COVID-19 cases on Friday

Agree Argaam Investment Company has updated the Privacy Policy of its services and digital platforms. Know more about our Privacy Policy here. Argaam uses cookies to personalize content, to provide social media features and analyze traffic, that we might also share with third parties. You consent to our cookies if you use this website
Read More

Winterkohl mit Wok-Effekt: So gelingt Wirsing herrlich asiatisch

zeit.de mit Werbung Um der Nutzung mit Werbung zuzustimmen, muss JavaScript in Ihrem Browser aktiviert sein. zeit.de mit Werbung Besuchen Sie zeit.de wie gewohnt mit Werbung und Tracking. Details zum Tracking finden Sie in der Datenschutzerklärung und im Privacy Center. zeit.de Pur Nutzen Sie zeit.de mit weniger Werbung und ohne Werbetracking für 1,20 €/Woche (für…
Read More
NASA, IBM team up to build LLM that can help fight climate change thumbnail

NASA, IBM team up to build LLM that can help fight climate change

The model, which was developed on IBM’s watsonx.ai platform, will be openly available on Hugging Face, the company said. IBM on Thursday said it has partnered with the US space agency NASA to co-develop a foundation large language model based on geospatial data that it claims will help scientists and their organizations fight climate change.
Read More
AscendEX Lists Pollen Token, PLN thumbnail

AscendEX Lists Pollen Token, PLN

AscendEX is thrilled to announce the listing of the Pollen Token (PLN) under the trading pair PLN/USDT on AscendEX starting on Jan 11 at 2 p.m. UTC.  The Pollen DeFi protocol is helping usher in the evolution of DeFi and Web 2.0. They have introduced a new asset to both the Avalanche and Ethereum blockchain…
Read More
Jeff Bezos’ Road To Riches: Behind The Billions thumbnail

Jeff Bezos’ Road To Riches: Behind The Billions

Chairman & Founder, Amazon No. 2 Rank on 2023 Forbes 400 List Of Richest Americans $161 B Net Worth as of September 8, 2023 AGE: 59 | SOURCE OF WEALTH: AMAZON | SELF-MADE SCORE: 8/10 | RESIDENCE: MEDINA, WASHINGTON | CITIZENSHIP: UNITED STATES | EDUCATION: BACHELORS ARTS/SCIENCE, PRINCETON UNIVERSITY Jeff Bezos quit his job at
Read More
Index Of News
Total
0
Share