
Asian Americans Under the Model Minority Gaze
Date: Friday, October 25 @ 15:00:00 EDT Topic: High-Tech Coolies
By Tojo Thatchenkery
International Association of Business Disciplines National Conference
March 31, 2000
Abstract
A perception exists that Asian Americans in the United States have
overcome the various cultural, racial, and social barriers to advancement
and have established themselves as a successful "model minority." This
paper looks into the various aspects of this stereotype and shows how a
good part of it is a myth. In organizational settings, under the constant
gaze of being perceived as the model minority, more is expected out of
Asian Americans. Yet, from an organizational politics and power point of
view, they end up becoming an invisible and forgotten minority reaching
impenetrable glass ceiling at the middle management level. This paper explores
the paradox of being a model and invisible minority all at the same time.
Introduction
Asian Americans have "made it" in America. That’s what the media and
the general public believes. Asian Americans are a "model" minority because
they are thought to have overcome the cultural, racial, and social barriers
to advancement and have established themselves as a successful group. It
is perceived that by hard work, diligence, entrepreneurship, and discipline
they have succeeded educationally, occupationally, and professionally in
America. Other minorities are asked to learn from the Asian American experience
and emulate their successes.
The primary source of the model minority myth is the impressive educational
achievement among Asian American students at all levels (Thatchenkery &
Cheng, 1997; Friedman & Krackhardt, 1997). For example, among the Westinghouse
Science Talent Search Award recipients each year is about 30 to 40% Asian
Americans, though as an ethnic group they comprise only of 4% of the U.S.
population. Similar disproportionately high representations are found among
the other science awards such as the Tandy’s and Intel’s as well. Asian
Americans are over-represented among the top performers in SAT, G.M.A.T,
and G.R.E. Further, in these tests Asian American students typically score
higher than all other groups, including Caucasian Americans.
Asian Americans had the highest graduation rate among all ethnic
groups in 1995, the most recent year for which data were available. Graduation
rate for Asian Americans was 65 percent, followed by white students (59
percent). The number of Asian Americans in higher education has more than
doubled between 1984 and 1995, from 390,000 to 797,000 (Thatchenkery &
Cheng, 1997). Similarly, Asian- American women have doubled the number
of degrees they have earned in each category since 1985 (Tang, 1997). Asian
Americans also earned 19.9 percent more doctoral degrees in 1995 than in
1994, the largest one-year increase among the four major ethnic minority
groups. The number of Asian Americans earning doctorates has more than
doubled since 1985 (Tang, 1997).
Are Asian Americans a Model Minority?
The exceptional showing by a small percentage of Asian Americans in
educational testing should not imply that it is dispersed equally among
the entire ethnic group. According to an Educational Testing Service (ETS)
research (Kim, 1997), the notion that Asian-Americans as a group are blessed
with almost universally excellent scholastic abilities is a myth that has
done a disservice to a diverse population. According to her study, Asian
Americans represent a mixture of extremely successful students who have
attained higher education and a large undereducated class, creating a bimodal
distribution. Kim studied 12th grade students from six major Asian-American
ethnic groups (Chinese, Filipino, Japanese, Korean, South Asian and Southeast
Asian descent) and found large variation in their educational backgrounds
and achievements. According to her, contrary to the stereotype, many Asian
Americans are undereducated and have low socioeconomic status. They are
diverse cultures representing over three billion people in many countries
and cultures. The myth of them all being educational high achievers has
kept many from needed students services and support. As a result, Asian-Americans
receive less poverty assistance and welfare than the general population
and are more likely to experience a discrepancy between their education
and income.
Model Minority Gaze in Industries and Organizations
Asian-American entrepreneurship is mostly visible by the over-representation
they hold in industries or neighborhoods that "native" entrepreneurs shun
as undesirable (e.g. lower income, communities of color). According to
Ong (1993), Asian-American entrepreneurship is largely limited to "backward"
and "declining" industries that are characterized by informal organization
and hyper-exploitative working conditions (There is a new exception, namely,
small information technology companies where Asian Americans have made
significant progress during the last five years).
The model minority perception has found its way into corporate America
as well (Cheng & Thatchenkery, 1997). Several studies (summarized in
Uba, 1994, and Thatchenkery & Cheng, 1997) have shown that white managers
perceive Asian Americans as the model minority who are modest, polite,
soft spoken, non-confrontational, diligent, agreeable, flexible, well-educated,
hardworking, intelligent, quantitatively minded, and less complaining.
They are also perceived as keen on maintaining harmony in relationships,
placing group interests over individual interests, duties over rights,
accommodating, conciliatory, blending in with groups rather than distinguishing
oneself through either good or bad behavior, withholding free expression
of feelings, refraining from openly challenging others’ perspective, and
placing high importance for fulfilling obligations.
The model minority perception is a myth in corporate America too. Though
Asian-Americans are the most educated group in the engineering workforce,
they earn 18% less than native-born Caucasian Americans (Tang, 1993). Asian
Americans fill only 0.3% of top positions in Fortune 500 firms. The ratio
in 1990 for Caucasian officers and managers to professionals was 0.54 (19,902
to 36,747), almost twice as high as the ratio for Asian Americans at 0.28
(Park, 1996). The 1995 Glass Ceiling Commission's report has powerfully
documented discrimination in hiring practices, salaries, and advancement
for Asian Americans, notwithstanding the fact that the group has the highest
level of educational attainment of any group in the United States.
One study found that the return on investment (ROI) on education for
Asian-Americans is significantly less compared to Caucasian Americans.
An addition of a college degree or higher produces a gain of $4,349 for
Caucasian Americans, $1,936 for Chinese Americans, and $1,297 for Indian
Americans (Barringer, Takeuchi, & Xenos, 1990). Similarly, Asian American
men earn less than comparable Caucasian American men do (Duleep & Sanders,
1992). Yet another study found that native-born Asians had incomes that
were proportional to those of Caucasian Americans but that they held fewer
managerial positions and were less likely to be promoted than equivalently
educated Caucasian Americans (Tang, 1993). Studies have shown that even
among immigrant Asians who have been in the United States for long periods
of time and among native-born Asians, there still exists evidence of lower
returns to education than for European Americans. Among the highly educated,
European Americans are more likely to be in supervisory positions, whereas
Asian Americans are more likely to be in professional positions (Kim &
Lewis, 1994).
Social Capital and the Model Minority
Asian Americans see investing in education as the most appropriate
means to achieve social mobility. They believe that human capital generated
by superior education will translate into career advancement. Human capital
translates into improved career by producing greater social capital. Friedman
& Krackhardt (1997) have reported that the ability of organizational
members to translate education into social capital is enhanced by being
in the dominant group within an organization and diminished by being in
one of the non-dominant groups. As a result, they indicated that Asian
Americans are less likely to be able to turn human capital into social
capital. Friedman & Krackhardt also found that there were lower returns
on education for Chinese and Asian Indians than for Caucasian Americans
in terms of managers’ assessment of career potential. Further, analysis
of their data from the computer services division of a major bank that
was staffed by a sizable number of immigrant Asians showed that education
translated into work team centrality (a measure of who is most sought after
in a group) only for Caucasian Americans (Friedman & Krackhardt, 1997).
The "best" education (degrees from prestigious universities) doesn’t typically
translate into career growth for Asian Americans.
Asian American Experience
The Asian American experience in corporate America is a paradoxical
one. The model minority perception has created career advancement difficult
for the group as a whole. An expectation of superior performance places
tremendous pressure on most Asian Americans. Living up to that image is
often a burden than a blessing. Further, the model minority perception
has boundaries that confine Asian Americans to non-managerial or non-leadership
positions. The Asian is bright and intelligent but not leadership material,
according to the stereotype. This explains the fast career advancement
they make from entry-level jobs to middle management. Transition to the
next level is almost impossible for Asian Americans. This glass ceiling
has its roots purely on ignorance than reality because Asian Americans
have proved that they are highly entrepreneurial by their successes in
starting small firms and growing them. Yet, when they join an institutional
setting, they are stereotyped as not having leadership skills.
As the Glass Ceiling Commission report showed, the most compelling
reason for creating opportunities for breaking the glass ceiling is the
bottom-line. Diversity makes organizations more competitive. It is in the
interest of an organization’s long-term growth and survival that its diverse
and talented employees stay and not leave to work for the competition.
This has become very demonstrable in high technology industries. Asian
Americans constitute 20-40 % of several well-known blue-chip information
technology companies. Most of them are at the entry level or near middle
level positions. Due to the high demand for information technology professionals
many of them have started leaving to join small firms where they get more
freedom, autonomy, and stock ownership. Large organizations have woken
up to this new development and have started offering leadership positions
and other incentives to Asian Americans to avoid this exodus.
Conclusion
There are serious implications of the model minority perception. At
the public policy level, the perception gives ammunition to those who argue
that Affirmative Action is unnecessary. At the organizational level, employers
who regard Asian Americans as the model minority may exploit them. Park
(1996) has shown that human resource managers in Silicon Valley saw Asian
Americans employees as expendable workers who may be hired and fired at
will since they would take what is offered, are too passive to complain,
and file less wrongful termination lawsuits.
In 1998, there were only 65 Asian American board members at the 1,000
biggest public companies, which accounted for less than 1% of the directorships.
Asian Americans have indeed become the "invisible minority." Between 1971
and 1997, there were 8403 studies on women and career development, 101
studies on African Americans and career advancement, but just 4 studies
on Asian Americans and career advancement (Korn/Ferry International, 1999)!
Not surprising, in a way, when we consider how deep-rooted is the model
minority stereotype. If Asian Americans are a "model" to others why would
they need anything? Therein lies the biggest challenge to the Asian American
community: To persistently and persuasively work to change the model minority
perception. Asian Americans should be treated just like any other ethnic
groups, that is, people with different skill levels and accomplishments.
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