Bias Mitigation
Structural Awareness
Intersectionality
Cultural Humility
H.E.R.S Model
100

When a fast-turn decision relies on instinct instead of shared standards, this risk increases because people default to patterns rather than evidence.

What is bias?

100

Evaluating how work actually gets assigned, who is included, and how decisions move under pressure is analyzing this.

What is a workflow?

100

Evaluating how overlapping identities affect someone’s experience of the same policy requires this perspective.

What is an intersectional perspective?

100

Saying “I might be missing something—can you share more?” reflects this specific behavior.

What is a learning stance?

100

Pausing to question your first interpretation, especially under pressure, reflects this HERS principle.

What is Humble Assumptions?

200

In a hiring or assignment process, this specific practice ensures candidates are evaluated using the same defined factors rather than informal judgment.

What is using consistent criteria?

200

When the same staff repeatedly miss high-visibility opportunities, this broader factor should be examined instead of individual performance alone.

What is the system?

200

Looking at only one identity, such as role or gender, fails to capture this key dynamic.

What is overlapping identities?

200

Choosing curiosity and listening instead of assuming expertise demonstrates this way of engaging.

What is curiosity-driven engagement?

200

Taking responsibility to learn rather than relying on colleagues to educate you reflects this principle.

What is Educate Yourself?

300

When reviewing applications without names, schools, or demographic indicators to reduce pattern-based assumptions, you are using this method.

What is blind review?

300

A policy appears neutral but results in uneven access across teams. This highlights the difference between these two concepts.

What is intent vs. impact?

300

When two people go through the same hiring process but experience different barriers due to combined factors, this concept explains the difference.

What is intersectionality?

300

Actively revising your perspective after hearing a different lived experience demonstrates this capacity.

What is openness to change?

300

Treating others as credible experts of their own experience reflects this principle.

What is Respect & Relate?

400

A team member pauses mid-decision and asks what assumption may be influencing their judgment before moving forward. This is an example of this bias interruption behavior.

What is self-reflection?

400

A point in a process where people are more likely to be excluded, overloaded, or overlooked is called this.

What is a barrier hotspot?

400

This approach helps explain how access, identity, and power interact within the same workflow

What is intersectional analysis?

400

Continuing to learn about perspectives beyond your own instead of relying on others to teach you reflects what responsibility.

What is self-directed learning?

400

Noticing how your background and perspective are shaping your reaction in real time reflects this principle.

What is Self-Awareness?

500

During a Workflow Equity Audit, a team notices that “not a culture fit” is repeatedly used without evidence. This tool or approach is being applied to question that pattern.

What is bias mitigation?

500

Shifting the question from “who messed up” to “what in the process made this outcome more likely” reflects this mindset.

What is systems thinking?

500

A training program works for some women but not for women with disabilities or women of color. This reveals a gap in considering what.

What is intersectional impact?

500

Recognizing that your assumptions may be incomplete and staying open to correction in real time demonstrates this practice.

What is cultural humility?

500

In a tense moment, someone pauses, questions their interpretation, and remains open to being wrong. Which principle is this most closely aligned with?

What is Humble Assumptions?