What I say, or how I say it? Ethnic accents and hiring evaluations in the Greater Toronto Area.

Postdoctoral Fellow of Language Studies at UTM, Dr. Samantha Jackson, and Associate Professor of Linguistics, Derek Denis, have recently published their work titled What I say, or how I say it? Ethnic accents and hiring evaluations in the Greater Toronto Area.

 

Jackson’s work, focusing on sociolinguistics, investigates how immigrants to Canada speaking with an identifiably non-Canadian accent are perceived by prospective employers. She investigates strategies to reduce such workplace discrimination and target other societal problems. Denis' interests follow variationist sociolinguistics (language change), and how human language faculty allows for variation both within the individual’s grammar and the larger context of the society in which it exists.

During their study, they recorded 12 women giving scripted 6 answers to interview questions, (3 good, 3 bad) and asked Human Resources students at universities and colleges in the GTA to rank the content of responses, as well as the employability of each voice. They were also asked to determine for which, if any, job interview to recommend these individuals. 

Analyzing the results using conditional inference tree modeling and random forest analysis, they found that the accent heard by participants affected their ratings of all these scripted responses, viewing Canadian accents as superior to those of non-Canadians – specifically, the most disadvantaged being Chinese, Nigerian, and German accents. These were least likely to be recommended for customer-facing and, importantly, higher-ranking jobs. 

Available in the June issue of Language, this work was previously presented at online conferences in 2021 and 2022, in Germany and in Vancouver. A full thematic analysis of comments from the full study’s sample was also presented in June at the CLA (Canadian Linguistics Association) Conference, held in Ottawa. 

As for this publication, major recommendations from the report include "that the OHRC [Ontario Human Rights Commission’s grounds for discrimination] explicitly take up language-based grounds for discrimination under their mandate." Though linguistic protection is an idea covered in sections 15 (Equality Rights), and 23 (Minority language and educational rights) of the Canadian Charter, Jackson and Denis’ work puts a spotlight on the need for specific and targeted legislation to protect Canadians with non-Canadian accents in the workplace.

 

Real change in public policy and legislation which emerges from projects like these are some of the most exciting moments we get to watch as they evolve. 

 

An important p.s.: Dr. Jackson will join the UofT Department of Linguistics in January 2025. We can't wait!

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Volume 100

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Number 2