Exploring the Color of Glass: Letters of Recommendation for Female and Male Medical Faculty
Top Cited Papers
- 1 March 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Discourse & Society
- Vol. 14 (2) , 191-220
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0957926503014002277
Abstract
This study examines over 300 letters of recommendation for medical faculty at a large American medical school in the mid-1990s, using methods from corpus and discourse analysis, with the theoretical perspective of gender schema from cognitive psychology. Letters written for female applicants were found to differ systematically from those written for male applicants in the extremes of length, in the percentages lacking in basic features, in the percentages with doubt raisers (an extended category of negative language, often associated with apparent commendation), and in frequency of mention of status terms. Further, the most common semantically grouped possessive phrases referring to female and male applicants (`her teaching,' `his research') reinforce gender schema that tend to portray women as teachers and students, and men as researchers and professionals.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Making Gender Relevant: Conversation Analysis and Gender Categories in InteractionDiscourse & Society, 2001
- PREDICTING PERFORMANCE AND SATISFACTIONAcademic Medicine, 1998
- Women's Voices and Experiences of the Hill‐Thomas HearingsAmerican Anthropologist, 1998
- A cross-cultural comparison of letters of recommendationEnglish for Specific Purposes, 1998
- A Cross-Cultural Analysis of the Structure and Content of Letters of ReferenceStudies in Second Language Acquisition, 1995
- FACTORS USED BY PHYSICAL MEDICINE AND REHABILITATION RESIDENCY TRAINING DIRECTORS TO SELECT THEIR RESIDENTSAmerican Journal of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation, 1994
- Evaluation of Resident Applicants by Letters of RecommendationInvestigative Radiology, 1993
- Think Practically and Look Locally: Language and Gender as Community-Based PracticeAnnual Review of Anthropology, 1992
- Residency directorsʼ assessments of which selection criteria best predict the performances of foreign-born foreign medical graduates during internal medicine residenciesAcademic Medicine, 1991
- Form of reference: Sex differences in letters of recommendation.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1984