More American workers are asking for flex time than ever before, but
according to a new study by researchers from the Yale School of
Management, Harvard Business School and the University of Texas-Austin,
female employees aren't getting it. Their male coworkers, however, are a
different story.
The study, "The Flexibility Stigma,"which was published in a special issue of the Journal of Social Issues found that bosses favor men when it comes to granting requests for flex time.
To examine attitudes towards flexible work schedules researchers
asked managers in pharmacology (which they deemed a gender-neutral
field) how they would handle flex time requests from male versus female
employees and professional versus hourly workers. They also surveyed
managers about how they would respond to requests for flex time for
career development reasons versus for child care and family time.
What they uncovered was an across-the-board gender bias. Managers
were most likely to grant flexible schedules to high-status professional
men seeking career advancement. Male hourly workers were also likely to
have their request approved when seeking flexibility for childcare
purposes. But when it came to female employees, flex time requests were
less likely to be granted regardless of job stature or reason. The bias
held true for both male and female managers.
A second study conducted
by the same researchers found that most employees were unaware of their
biases. Interestingly, professional women with high-status jobs who
requested flexible schedules in order to advance their careers were the
most likely to think that their requests would be granted, while men in
the same situation were the least likely to think they would get
permission to move to flex time.
"Biased decisions, lack of trust, a pile of refused requests for
flex: quite the recipe for creating a workplace where employee
motivation, commitment, and loyalty sour," wrote Nanette Fondas in a Slate article on the study.
Still, more than three-quarters of U.S. companies have turned on to the advantages of flex time -- which includes less stressed and happier workers and greater employee loyalty.
"There are other companies who 'get it' and realize that they
benefit enormously when their employees have more broadly successful
lives and are able to pursue more of their life ambitions than just
their business careers," writes Sophie Wade, CEO of Flexcel Networks, in a recent Huffington Post blog. "There is movement, increased noise, compelling data and, therefore, also hope."
Source: http://tinyurl.com/lclu2zx
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