Blacks and Hispanics not getting hired for tech jobs — Even those with tech degrees

Steve Jobs
In this Aug. 25, 2011 file photo, Apple employees walk between buildings at Apple headquarters in Cupertino, Calif. A breakdown released Tuesday, Aug. 12, 2014 by Apple Inc. showed 54 percent of the company’s technology jobs in the U.S. are handled by Whites and another 23 percent by Asians. Men make up 80 percent of Apple’s technology workforce throughout the world. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma, File)

A Today report says that only 2% of technology workers at seven major tech companies in Silicon Valley are Black, and just 3% are Hispanic. This is so despite the fact that thousands of Black and Hispanic students graduate with computer science and computer engineering degrees every year from the top universities.
So who is to blame?
The tech companies say the pool of job applicants is insufficient, but Darrick Hamilton, professor of economics and urban policy at The New School in New York, says that doesn’t hold up. “If you look at the empirical evidence, that is just not the case,” he said.
Ebay, Facebook, Google, Twitter, Yahoo and Apple all declined to comment on the issue, but many of them have released data in the past year showing that they have very few tech workers among their staff. Even LinkedIn says that they are “[addressing] the need for greater diversity.”
So what’s the solution?
According to Wired Magazine, tech companies usually only recruit at major universities such as Stanford, UC-Berkeley, Carnegie Mellon, UCLA and MIT. Meanwhile, the elite computer science departments that graduate larger numbers of African-American and Hispanic students get less visits by recruiters. Experts say that the solution is obviously to recruit more at universities where minority students attend and graduate from.
And why should tech companies care about diversity?
It’s simple. If you lose touch with an ethnic group and they start to view you as bias or discriminative, they will stop supporting your brand as customers. That could cost any one of the tech giants billions of dollars in annual revenue if it were to happen.
Who’s making changes?
Google, whose popular search engine is used by millions of African Americans and Hispanics daily, was the first major tech company to admit their lack of diversity. They were also the first to publicly release a workforce demographics report earlier this year. They were commended for doing so, and so far, experts say they are the most aggressive at addressing the issue.
Meanwhile, Apple recently broke headlines by pledging $100 million to President Obama’s ConnectED initiative which aims to bring cutting-edge technologies to schools in low-income areas.
https://www.blacknews.com/news/blacks-hispanics-not-getting-hired-tech-jobs101.html#.VEFhZlfc_N4

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