Guess the Bias
Conscious vs Unconscious Bias
Deep Sea or Surface Level
Fighting Implicit Bias
100

A male employee consistently interrupts and talks over his female colleagues during meetings, while giving more attention and consideration to his male peers.

Gender Bias
100

An individual openly mocks a coworker with a visible disability, expressing their belief that the coworker is incapable of doing their job effectively.

Conscious Bias

100

Gender 

Surface 


100

Encourage peers and colleagues to provide feedback on your behaviors and language that may reflect bias.

Feedback 

200

In a college classroom, a professor frequently calls on and engages with younger students during discussions and activities, inadvertently sidelining the older student in the class. This unintentional bias creates a less inclusive learning environment for the older student.

Ageism

200

A supervisor unconsciously gives more credibility and respect to employees who hold higher positions or titles within the organization, even if they don't necessarily have more expertise.

Unconscious 

200

Marital Status 

Deep Sea

300

During a job application review, a hiring manager sees a candidate's name and immediately assumes they are not a native English speaker and may have communication issues, without even looking at their qualifications or experience. This name bias leads to the candidate being unfairly excluded from consideration.

Name Bias

300

 In a hiring process, an interviewer unconsciously favors candidates who attended the same university as they did, feeling a sense of affinity with them.

Unconscious Bias 

300

Parental Style 

Deep Sea

400

A teacher assumes that a student who belongs to a particular ethnic group is not academically inclined and consistently treats them with lower expectations, which impacts the student's performance and self-esteem.

Stereotype Bias

400

A manager, unconsciously influenced by societal stereotypes, might hesitate to assign a project that involves client meetings to an openly LGBTQ+ employee, assuming clients may not be comfortable with their sexual orientation.

Unconscious 

400

Ethnicity 

Surface 


500

A charismatic and attractive employee receives more promotions and positive performance evaluations than their equally qualified, but less charismatic, colleagues

Halo Effect

500

A college admissions officer openly admits to favoring applicants from prestigious schools and discrediting applicants from less-known institutions, expressing their bias toward certain educational backgrounds.

Conscious Bias 
500

Age 

Surface

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