Women of Color Face Added Challenges in Workplace

Tina Tchen and Adrienne Lawrence talk to 香港六合彩开奖资料 students about extra 鈥渉omework鈥 required to overcome big assumptions, small margin for error

Edward Fitzpatrick
Panelists talk about being women of color in the workplace.
Adrienne Lawrence (left) and Tina Tchen (center) discuss the "micro-aggressions" and false assumptions they've encountered being women of color in the workplace. 香港六合彩开奖资料 Professor Kamille Gentles-Peart (right) moderated the conversation and shared her own perspective. Image Credit: Oggi Photo

BRISTOL, R.I. 鈥 As a trial lawyer, Tina Tchen would talk to jurors after the verdict was in. And on more than one occasion, jurors told her: 鈥淲e were so impressed with how well you spoke English.鈥

Tchen 鈥 a Chinese-American who grew up in a Cleveland suburb and who went on to become chief of staff to former First Lady Michelle Obama 鈥 laughed when recalling those uncomfortable moments, saying, 鈥淥K, that is the only language I speak.鈥

Adrienne Lawrence, an African-American legal analyst and former ESPN anchor who grew up in California, can relate. She said she has often had people tell her: 鈥淵ou are so articulate.鈥

Tchen and Lawrence came to Roger Williams University on March 28 for a panel discussion titled 鈥淣ot Just Race, Not Just Gender: Women of Color in the Workplace.鈥 Inspired by the Time's Up and #MeToo movements, the event was sponsored by the 香港六合彩开奖资料 Donor Fund to Increase Sexual Assault Awareness on College Campuses. It is part of 香港六合彩开奖资料鈥檚 year-long series, 鈥Talking About Race, Gender and Power鈥 and the President鈥檚 Distinguished Speaker Series.

Tchen and Lawrence spoke to 香港六合彩开奖资料 students, faculty and staff about the false assumptions, 鈥渕icro-aggressions鈥 and other challenges that women of color face on the job.

Tina Tchen and Kamille Gentles-Peart
Tina Tchen (left) laughs when recalling her response to uncomfortable moments of people making assumptions based on her race.

鈥淧eople of color have to do way more homework,鈥 Tchen said. 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 go away after you graduate from school. In the workplace, you have to do way more homework so that you are always prepared to push back against those [false assumptions].鈥

Women of color are not given as many chances to fail, she said. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 get multiple strikes. You get fewer strikes than white men.鈥

Rather than let that drive her 鈥渃razy,鈥 Tchen took it as a challenge. 鈥淚 am going to show you: I don鈥檛 need any strikes; we are going to do this right the first time,鈥 she said. 鈥淲hich is why I think I have had the success that I鈥檝e had 鈥 that understanding that I had to do more homework stayed with me.鈥

While that鈥檚 not fair, Tchen said, 鈥淚t鈥檚 there, and that鈥檚, unfortunately, still the case.鈥

Lawrence said, 鈥淚 found that at law firms there was always that question of: Do you want me as a token to have me in a photo or are you going to give me substantive work?鈥

She said she had to work hard to build trust and to ensure she had enough cases to keep her busy.

鈥淎s Tina mentioned, you work a lot harder than a lot of people,鈥 Lawrence said. 鈥淪tudies show that people tend to relate to or give work to people who look like them, and there were very few people who I happened to look like at my law firm.鈥

Adrienne Lawrence
Adrienne Lawrence talks about the challenges of being treated as equal in the workplace.

Looking ahead, she said, 鈥淗opefully, as places become more diverse, individuals won鈥檛 be seen as tokens or meeting some kind of quota 鈥 that it will be for the wealth of knowledge and human capital that they bring to the table.鈥

香港六合彩开奖资料 Associate Professor of Communications Kamille Gentles-Peart said women of color may take a job knowing their strengths but end up suppressing some of their identity to make themselves more 鈥減alatable鈥 in the workplace. 鈥淗ow do you hold on to your authentic self in the context of the workplace that is very much based on ideologies that may not allow you to be fully expressive of that?鈥 she asked.

Tchen said women of color face 鈥渁 constant calibration鈥 of the moment, deciding whether to stay true to who they are or make choices about the battles they pick. She said one compromise she made was clothing because it wasn鈥檛 all that important to her what she wore. She decided she would always wear business clothes, even when law firms began having dress-down days.

鈥淚 knew the external view was kind of important,鈥 she said. 鈥淲hen I鈥檓 walking into a room with all-male lawyers, I have a hard enough time getting taken seriously without walking in there in jeans.鈥

But Tchen said she would never compromise about her basic demeanor. 鈥淚 am not demure. I am not the quiet person. I am not the shy person. I am not that image of an Asian woman,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hat was the piece I didn鈥檛 give up.鈥

Lawrence said she, too, made sure to dress professionally at law firms. 鈥淚 was always in pearls,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 was polished.鈥 She said her mother always told her: 鈥淓verywhere you go, you are representing the black community.鈥

When she was younger, Lawrence said she sometimes concealed part of what she was really like. 鈥淎s I got older, I started giving people the chance to meet the 100 percent authentic, genuine me,鈥 she said.

Both Tchen and Lawrence praised 香港六合彩开奖资料 for its 鈥淭alking About Race, Gender and Power鈥 series. 鈥淚鈥檓 enormously impressed that you are having these conversations,鈥 Tchen said. 鈥淎nd you are having them in a thoughtful and engaging way."