Anonymous wrote:She basically said she wanted a chance to do meaningful work and raise a family (she was unmarried at that time).
You know, I am a working fed with kids, and I have to say, I agree that this is not an appropriate answer in an interview. Yes, you want to ask questions about life in the office and how it will work with your family - AFTER you have the offer. The interview is a chance to show why you are interested in the work that the position offers - meaning the job duties. I mean, if a single person intereviewed for a job and one of their answers about why they were interested in the position was "because it will allow me to telework one day a week," that would look pretty weak too, right? Certainly they shouldn't pass this woman over on the basis that she has kids, but one of her stated reasons for wanting the job shouldn't be because it has an easy schedule. Also, the answer is insulting because it insinuates that she feels that the people who currently work there aren't willing to work hard/long hours if necessary.
What do I have to be bitter about? I've got the job, the husband, and the kids. But when I was in my 20s and interviewing? All I wanted WAS THE JOB. She seemed to want a husband and kids and, oh, a job too.
She basically said she wanted a chance to do meaningful work and raise a family (she was unmarried at that time).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She wasn't always ON our team. That's the difference. So the camaraderie among WOHMs was already built. When you've been in the workforce all that time - w/o stepping out - you see things differently.
I've seen so many SAHMs throw themselves into school activities - running the auction, becoming volunteer coordinator, assisting with lunch duty. I've always said that if they could take that energy and put it into a job, they'd become CEOs in no time. So many substitute volunteering for work. why? It's a way to shine w/o the pressure of really performing. It's also an excuse to NOT work b/c you're so instrumental in ensuring your child's school is run well.
Anonymous wrote:When you are offended (or making the choice to feel insulted) by a SAHM who says quite honestly "I stayed at home to raise my kids" then YOU are creating the controversy where there is none!
I totally agree with the WOHMs who advise SAHMs not to talk on and on about their kids in an interview. Fair point. But, to assume a judgment or insult from someone who is talking about HER own choices... well, that's just making it all about you when it's not about you.
I have been asked several times in different interviews "how old are your kids." They know I have kids b/c of the gap and my explanation of what I was doing. The interviewers are the ones trying to bring in more info. about the kids.... and then they are subtly calculating if the kids still young and going to cause a problem for the employer.
If a person says she decided to stay home and take care of her kids it is NOT the same thing as judging all WOHMs for not taking care of their kids. It's not about the the WOHM!
Lastly, you would think that a person who WOH, would be thrilled to see the arch-enemy (SAHM) trying to follow in the WOHM's footsteps! Here is a person from the "opposing" team trying to join your team, and all you can do is insult the person who wants to join your team???? You insult the SAHMs for staying at home, but when they try to be WOHMs you want to kick them back into their corner (which you sarcastically deride).
Seriously. Think about your logic if you are one of the WOHMs who is slamming on the SAHMs trying to get jobs. And try to let go of the perceived attacks, b/c I've never heard SAHMs insulting WOHMs in real life. Ever.
Let's see to the PP quoted on the top (the WOHM): you say that if the SAHMs would put their energy into a job rather than to volunteer activities, that "they'd become CEOs in no time." You're right, but someone would need to HIRE her first. Maybe that's where all the WOHM animosity comes from. You don't want to hire someone who could rise to that level (especially after that woman has stayed at home). After all, wouldn't that mean the she could 1) raise her children and 2) succeed at work? How horrible for you if that type of track was actually available to women. That would mean that working/staying at home didn't need to be an all or nothing proposition. Could it be that, you MUST deny the SAHM the opportunity to return to work and succeed there? Because if she returns and succeeds then, by definition she would have achieved it ALL/the holy grail: staying at home when the kids needed her and achieving at work despite that choice. How, then, would you feel about having missed the opportunity (one that can never be recreated, btw) to be with your children when they are little? Wouldn't you feel like you had gotten a raw deal by staying at work (most likely to make sure you didn't lose your career, etc.) if some SAHM comes along and is accepted back into the workplace and succeeds when she is there. By holding the SAHM down, you WOHM/interviewer perpetuate the all or nothing paradigm.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:nonplussed= unperturbed. it is exactly what I think it means
That usage has only emerged in the past dozen years or so. The original meaning, and the one that most people consider to be correct, is the opposite of what you think.
Look it up in the dictionary sister. Whether you like it or not, it is correct usage. Honestly, when you try to slam someone and make yourself feel superior, you should at least be right. Better luck next time. Maybe you need a SAHM to tutor you in the English language. Hopefully she can meet you on your day off work.
Anonymous wrote:Man here. You ladies are still at it? It's Friday night so you're all SAHMs for the next 2 days (3 for some of you because of the holiday). Enjoy yourselves and don't waste away a weekend feeling combative and insecure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I and a colleague recently got over 400 resumes for one federal sector attorney job. We whittled our interviews down to ten. Then down to three. One was a woman who interviewed quite well until we asked her what she wanted out of the position. She basically said she wanted a chance to do meaningful work and raise a family (she was unmarried at that time). Both I and my colleague have kids, but we didn't like her stating this in an interview. We hired a very bright gay man who didn't say anything about kids instead. And we never looked back for a second.
You are vile.
Why? We made a fantastic hire.
The hypersensitivity in this thread is astounding. In most cases, someone saying they stayed home to raise their kids has nothing to do with you. It is not implying anything- no one is talking about you, no one is slamming you- they are simply stating what they did (or currently do). All this "so you are saying I don't raise my kids" is ridiculous.
Get over your animosity or guilt and find something else to gripe about.
Anonymous wrote:Neither candidate (single woman, gay man) had children at the time, so how can discrimination be based on family status?
I do wonder how the PP knew that the man was gay though -- did it come up in conversation? maybe that's a good thing to let your interviewers know? I would have thought maybe to keep quiet about sexual orientation, personally, as not being relevant to the job description and duties...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I and a colleague recently got over 400 resumes for one federal sector attorney job. We whittled our interviews down to ten. Then down to three. One was a woman who interviewed quite well until we asked her what she wanted out of the position. She basically said she wanted a chance to do meaningful work and raise a family (she was unmarried at that time). Both I and my colleague have kids, but we didn't like her stating this in an interview. We hired a very bright gay man who didn't say anything about kids instead. And we never looked back for a second.
You are vile.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I and a colleague recently got over 400 resumes for one federal sector attorney job. We whittled our interviews down to ten. Then down to three. One was a woman who interviewed quite well until we asked her what she wanted out of the position. She basically said she wanted a chance to do meaningful work and raise a family (she was unmarried at that time). Both I and my colleague have kids, but we didn't like her stating this in an interview. We hired a very bright gay man who didn't say anything about kids instead. And we never looked back for a second.
That applicant lucked out. And you and your colleague are complete asshats. And possibly discriminatory.
Congrats.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I and a colleague recently got over 400 resumes for one federal sector attorney job. We whittled our interviews down to ten. Then down to three. One was a woman who interviewed quite well until we asked her what she wanted out of the position. She basically said she wanted a chance to do meaningful work and raise a family (she was unmarried at that time). Both I and my colleague have kids, but we didn't like her stating this in an interview. We hired a very bright gay man who didn't say anything about kids instead. And we never looked back for a second.
That applicant lucked out. And you and your colleague are complete asshats. And possibly discriminatory.
Congrats.
Discrimination based on family/parent status IS in violation of an executive order that came out during Clinton's administration. I was an attorney at OPM at the time (no kids) and I thought it was the silliest thing ever b/c EVERYBODY (almost) had kids -- so how/why would they discriminate! But... now I see why the exec. order was necessary.... and apparently still is.
Sad commentary on hiring practices. It is illegal in the fed. gov.