Discriminated by senior researcher because of my ethnicityMy co-authors want to remove my name from manuscript because I am “not in science anymore,” how to correct this?Resolving dependency on a senior colleague before deadline

Is it idiomatic to construct against `this`

What's the polite way to say "I need to urinate"?

How do I reattach a shelf to the wall when it ripped out of the wall?

bldc motor, esc and battery draw, nominal vs peak

Multiple options vs single option UI

"The cow" OR "a cow" OR "cows" in this context

Can I criticise the more senior developers around me for not writing clean code?

Do I have an "anti-research" personality?

Why do games have consumables?

Map of water taps to fill bottles

Can an Area of Effect spell cast outside a Prismatic Wall extend inside it?

How does Captain America channel this power?

As an international instructor, should I openly talk about my accent?

Which big number is bigger?

How to not starve gigantic beasts

What causes platform events to fail to be published and should I cater for failed platform event creations?

Don’t seats that recline flat defeat the purpose of having seatbelts?

How can I get this effect? Please see the attached image

What is the most expensive material in the world that could be used to create Pun-Pun's lute?

Constructions of PRF (Pseudo Random Function)

How could Tony Stark make this in Endgame?

How to pronounce 'c++' in Spanish

Can't get 5V 3A DC constant

Is Diceware more secure than a long passphrase?



Discriminated by senior researcher because of my ethnicity


My co-authors want to remove my name from manuscript because I am “not in science anymore,” how to correct this?Resolving dependency on a senior colleague before deadline













3















I am working on a collaborative project between different parties, and there is a senior researcher who underestimates constantly what I ever propose or speak, and he tries to illustrate that I am doing nothing new.



Although I have proven for the second time that there is a limitation in the study, he doesn't listen. I have witnessed that he respects and appreciates Asian students more than me.



Of course this just my side of the story, but I know many people from his country do not like women wearing traditional clothes as I do.



I don't know how to solve this problem, but I am not the only case. Many others are being judged by him based on their complexion, appearance, and garments.



I am kind of frustrated, trying to be amicable. Of course, there are other members in the project who appreciate me, but this senior researcher has clout over them.



What I should do in that case?



EDIT



I know I cannot change some people opinion about people from specific religion or ethnicity, what I can do psychologically to override that, I am trying to do my best as much as I can, but still, I had the same behavior.










share|improve this question



















  • 8





    Do you have any evidence that would convince a third party, like an ombudsperson, a common superior of you and the senior researcher, or the human resources department that the senior researcher is discriminating based on your ethnicity? In particular, how did you witness "that he respects and appreciates Asian students more" than you? What does the (purported) discrimination consist in other than him underestimating you and disagreeing with you?

    – henning
    11 hours ago







  • 3





    While it is certainly frustrating to have people dismiss your ideas, once it happens this frequently and is done by so many different people, the number of common factors between the situations start to shrink.

    – Tobias Kildetoft
    11 hours ago






  • 6





    Please everyone. Don't suggest that there aren't racist and xenophobic people in academia. There are. I think fewer than in the general population, but they exist and their effect is felt by a few students. I don't know that this is the case here, but please don't reject the concept without consideration.

    – Buffy
    10 hours ago






  • 4





    @Buffy Who is suggesting that the phenomenon does not exist? It certain happens, but once it is claimed to have come from enough different sources in enough different places, it is fine to have a healthy dose of skepticism towards the one making the claims.

    – Tobias Kildetoft
    9 hours ago






  • 6





    @Buffy thanks for the opportunity to clarify: I don't contest (or confirm) OP's interpretation, but possible answers differ depending on what exactly OP observed and whether OP has any hard evidence.

    – henning
    9 hours ago
















3















I am working on a collaborative project between different parties, and there is a senior researcher who underestimates constantly what I ever propose or speak, and he tries to illustrate that I am doing nothing new.



Although I have proven for the second time that there is a limitation in the study, he doesn't listen. I have witnessed that he respects and appreciates Asian students more than me.



Of course this just my side of the story, but I know many people from his country do not like women wearing traditional clothes as I do.



I don't know how to solve this problem, but I am not the only case. Many others are being judged by him based on their complexion, appearance, and garments.



I am kind of frustrated, trying to be amicable. Of course, there are other members in the project who appreciate me, but this senior researcher has clout over them.



What I should do in that case?



EDIT



I know I cannot change some people opinion about people from specific religion or ethnicity, what I can do psychologically to override that, I am trying to do my best as much as I can, but still, I had the same behavior.










share|improve this question



















  • 8





    Do you have any evidence that would convince a third party, like an ombudsperson, a common superior of you and the senior researcher, or the human resources department that the senior researcher is discriminating based on your ethnicity? In particular, how did you witness "that he respects and appreciates Asian students more" than you? What does the (purported) discrimination consist in other than him underestimating you and disagreeing with you?

    – henning
    11 hours ago







  • 3





    While it is certainly frustrating to have people dismiss your ideas, once it happens this frequently and is done by so many different people, the number of common factors between the situations start to shrink.

    – Tobias Kildetoft
    11 hours ago






  • 6





    Please everyone. Don't suggest that there aren't racist and xenophobic people in academia. There are. I think fewer than in the general population, but they exist and their effect is felt by a few students. I don't know that this is the case here, but please don't reject the concept without consideration.

    – Buffy
    10 hours ago






  • 4





    @Buffy Who is suggesting that the phenomenon does not exist? It certain happens, but once it is claimed to have come from enough different sources in enough different places, it is fine to have a healthy dose of skepticism towards the one making the claims.

    – Tobias Kildetoft
    9 hours ago






  • 6





    @Buffy thanks for the opportunity to clarify: I don't contest (or confirm) OP's interpretation, but possible answers differ depending on what exactly OP observed and whether OP has any hard evidence.

    – henning
    9 hours ago














3












3








3








I am working on a collaborative project between different parties, and there is a senior researcher who underestimates constantly what I ever propose or speak, and he tries to illustrate that I am doing nothing new.



Although I have proven for the second time that there is a limitation in the study, he doesn't listen. I have witnessed that he respects and appreciates Asian students more than me.



Of course this just my side of the story, but I know many people from his country do not like women wearing traditional clothes as I do.



I don't know how to solve this problem, but I am not the only case. Many others are being judged by him based on their complexion, appearance, and garments.



I am kind of frustrated, trying to be amicable. Of course, there are other members in the project who appreciate me, but this senior researcher has clout over them.



What I should do in that case?



EDIT



I know I cannot change some people opinion about people from specific religion or ethnicity, what I can do psychologically to override that, I am trying to do my best as much as I can, but still, I had the same behavior.










share|improve this question
















I am working on a collaborative project between different parties, and there is a senior researcher who underestimates constantly what I ever propose or speak, and he tries to illustrate that I am doing nothing new.



Although I have proven for the second time that there is a limitation in the study, he doesn't listen. I have witnessed that he respects and appreciates Asian students more than me.



Of course this just my side of the story, but I know many people from his country do not like women wearing traditional clothes as I do.



I don't know how to solve this problem, but I am not the only case. Many others are being judged by him based on their complexion, appearance, and garments.



I am kind of frustrated, trying to be amicable. Of course, there are other members in the project who appreciate me, but this senior researcher has clout over them.



What I should do in that case?



EDIT



I know I cannot change some people opinion about people from specific religion or ethnicity, what I can do psychologically to override that, I am trying to do my best as much as I can, but still, I had the same behavior.







interpersonal-issues






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 9 hours ago







Monkia

















asked 11 hours ago









MonkiaMonkia

428310




428310







  • 8





    Do you have any evidence that would convince a third party, like an ombudsperson, a common superior of you and the senior researcher, or the human resources department that the senior researcher is discriminating based on your ethnicity? In particular, how did you witness "that he respects and appreciates Asian students more" than you? What does the (purported) discrimination consist in other than him underestimating you and disagreeing with you?

    – henning
    11 hours ago







  • 3





    While it is certainly frustrating to have people dismiss your ideas, once it happens this frequently and is done by so many different people, the number of common factors between the situations start to shrink.

    – Tobias Kildetoft
    11 hours ago






  • 6





    Please everyone. Don't suggest that there aren't racist and xenophobic people in academia. There are. I think fewer than in the general population, but they exist and their effect is felt by a few students. I don't know that this is the case here, but please don't reject the concept without consideration.

    – Buffy
    10 hours ago






  • 4





    @Buffy Who is suggesting that the phenomenon does not exist? It certain happens, but once it is claimed to have come from enough different sources in enough different places, it is fine to have a healthy dose of skepticism towards the one making the claims.

    – Tobias Kildetoft
    9 hours ago






  • 6





    @Buffy thanks for the opportunity to clarify: I don't contest (or confirm) OP's interpretation, but possible answers differ depending on what exactly OP observed and whether OP has any hard evidence.

    – henning
    9 hours ago













  • 8





    Do you have any evidence that would convince a third party, like an ombudsperson, a common superior of you and the senior researcher, or the human resources department that the senior researcher is discriminating based on your ethnicity? In particular, how did you witness "that he respects and appreciates Asian students more" than you? What does the (purported) discrimination consist in other than him underestimating you and disagreeing with you?

    – henning
    11 hours ago







  • 3





    While it is certainly frustrating to have people dismiss your ideas, once it happens this frequently and is done by so many different people, the number of common factors between the situations start to shrink.

    – Tobias Kildetoft
    11 hours ago






  • 6





    Please everyone. Don't suggest that there aren't racist and xenophobic people in academia. There are. I think fewer than in the general population, but they exist and their effect is felt by a few students. I don't know that this is the case here, but please don't reject the concept without consideration.

    – Buffy
    10 hours ago






  • 4





    @Buffy Who is suggesting that the phenomenon does not exist? It certain happens, but once it is claimed to have come from enough different sources in enough different places, it is fine to have a healthy dose of skepticism towards the one making the claims.

    – Tobias Kildetoft
    9 hours ago






  • 6





    @Buffy thanks for the opportunity to clarify: I don't contest (or confirm) OP's interpretation, but possible answers differ depending on what exactly OP observed and whether OP has any hard evidence.

    – henning
    9 hours ago








8




8





Do you have any evidence that would convince a third party, like an ombudsperson, a common superior of you and the senior researcher, or the human resources department that the senior researcher is discriminating based on your ethnicity? In particular, how did you witness "that he respects and appreciates Asian students more" than you? What does the (purported) discrimination consist in other than him underestimating you and disagreeing with you?

– henning
11 hours ago






Do you have any evidence that would convince a third party, like an ombudsperson, a common superior of you and the senior researcher, or the human resources department that the senior researcher is discriminating based on your ethnicity? In particular, how did you witness "that he respects and appreciates Asian students more" than you? What does the (purported) discrimination consist in other than him underestimating you and disagreeing with you?

– henning
11 hours ago





3




3





While it is certainly frustrating to have people dismiss your ideas, once it happens this frequently and is done by so many different people, the number of common factors between the situations start to shrink.

– Tobias Kildetoft
11 hours ago





While it is certainly frustrating to have people dismiss your ideas, once it happens this frequently and is done by so many different people, the number of common factors between the situations start to shrink.

– Tobias Kildetoft
11 hours ago




6




6





Please everyone. Don't suggest that there aren't racist and xenophobic people in academia. There are. I think fewer than in the general population, but they exist and their effect is felt by a few students. I don't know that this is the case here, but please don't reject the concept without consideration.

– Buffy
10 hours ago





Please everyone. Don't suggest that there aren't racist and xenophobic people in academia. There are. I think fewer than in the general population, but they exist and their effect is felt by a few students. I don't know that this is the case here, but please don't reject the concept without consideration.

– Buffy
10 hours ago




4




4





@Buffy Who is suggesting that the phenomenon does not exist? It certain happens, but once it is claimed to have come from enough different sources in enough different places, it is fine to have a healthy dose of skepticism towards the one making the claims.

– Tobias Kildetoft
9 hours ago





@Buffy Who is suggesting that the phenomenon does not exist? It certain happens, but once it is claimed to have come from enough different sources in enough different places, it is fine to have a healthy dose of skepticism towards the one making the claims.

– Tobias Kildetoft
9 hours ago




6




6





@Buffy thanks for the opportunity to clarify: I don't contest (or confirm) OP's interpretation, but possible answers differ depending on what exactly OP observed and whether OP has any hard evidence.

– henning
9 hours ago






@Buffy thanks for the opportunity to clarify: I don't contest (or confirm) OP's interpretation, but possible answers differ depending on what exactly OP observed and whether OP has any hard evidence.

– henning
9 hours ago











3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















7














In the comments you mentioned that getting an ombudsperson involved was not an option for you. However, your advisor does not necessarily need to know that you talked to the ombudsperson. Ombudspersons are often required to keep discussions confidential unless you explicitly tell them otherwise. You of course need to check that before with your ombudsperson before you go that route. Just discussing your options face to face with another person who has to treat that discussion confidentially is probably of enough value in and of itself. And maybe (s)he can do even more.






share|improve this answer






























    5














    The first step in solving this issue is going to be convincing a senior third party that there is a problem. This third party could be:



    • The head of department

    • Your supervisor (if you have one)

    • An ombudsperson

    • A faculty member of the same ethnicity as you

    Tell them you have a personal issue and need their help and their confidence. Odds are, they will be willing to help you.



    Be warned that evidence will be paramount in this kind of dispute. The odds are high that he'll deny he's discriminating, and he might even be able to provide some evidence for that (for example, perhaps he's supervised a student of the same ethnicity as you, possibly wears the same clothes as you, and that student had a positive experience). You will need convincing evidence of your own. As of time of writing, there's nothing convincing in the question statement.



    If you don't have that evidence, start collecting it. For example something like this:




    On 27 April 2019, I approached him with [solution] to [problem]. He laughed and said in the presence of other students that it's not surprising someone of [your ethnicity] would come up with something that will not work. I later proved him wrong by showing that the solution indeed works.




    The more such incidents you can document, the more compelling your case will be.






    share|improve this answer






























      4















      I am kind of frustrated, trying to be amicable. Of course, there are other members in the project who appreciate me, but this senior researcher has clout over them.




      First, it's important that you maintain these good relations with the people who appreciate you. If you feel comfortable with it, you could try to discuss the issue with them: this way you would get a more neutral point of view, and if they confirm your feeling of being discriminated against you have a more solid reason to act on it. Assuming some of them are more experienced, they can also provide you with advice knowing the specifics of the situation.




      what I ever propose or speak, and he tries to illustrate that I am doing nothing new.



      Although I have proven for the second time that there is a limitation in the study, he doesn't listen. I have witnessed that he respects and appreciates Asian students more than me.




      Second, I would suggest that you try to assess this potential bias as carefully and objectively as possible by being "extremely professional" yourself. This is not easy, but it's worth clarifying the nature of the bias, especially if you consider making a complaint but also simply for your own peace of mind. The idea is to be extremely rigorous in whatever you present to this person. For instance when you have an idea to propose, prepare a written report with the points you want to make: what is the main problem, why it matters, what is the solution that you propose, all of this preferably backed by references in the literature and showing the novelty (btw this can also help you write a paper or your PhD later). By doing this you take the discussion to a professional level, as opposed to the grey area of intuitions/opinions. This will make your arguments clear and precise, so that it's harder for the senior researcher to dismiss them without themselves making the effort of replying in detail. It also shows effort on your part, so it would make any bias in favor of other students' ideas much more obvious comparatively. Finally, there's even an (admittedly small) chance that your efforts would cause this person to realize their bias and change their behaviour in the future.



      I hope this helps.






      share|improve this answer























      • thank for this answer! actually, I am trying to be as professional as much as I can and don't commit mistakes, it takes me time to make a rigorous proof and that is my end goal.

        – Monkia
        1 hour ago











      Your Answer








      StackExchange.ready(function()
      var channelOptions =
      tags: "".split(" "),
      id: "415"
      ;
      initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

      StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
      // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
      if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
      StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
      createEditor();
      );

      else
      createEditor();

      );

      function createEditor()
      StackExchange.prepareEditor(
      heartbeatType: 'answer',
      autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
      convertImagesToLinks: true,
      noModals: true,
      showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
      reputationToPostImages: 10,
      bindNavPrevention: true,
      postfix: "",
      imageUploader:
      brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
      contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
      allowUrls: true
      ,
      noCode: true, onDemand: true,
      discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
      ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
      );



      );













      draft saved

      draft discarded


















      StackExchange.ready(
      function ()
      StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2facademia.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f129708%2fdiscriminated-by-senior-researcher-because-of-my-ethnicity%23new-answer', 'question_page');

      );

      Post as a guest















      Required, but never shown

























      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes








      3 Answers
      3






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      7














      In the comments you mentioned that getting an ombudsperson involved was not an option for you. However, your advisor does not necessarily need to know that you talked to the ombudsperson. Ombudspersons are often required to keep discussions confidential unless you explicitly tell them otherwise. You of course need to check that before with your ombudsperson before you go that route. Just discussing your options face to face with another person who has to treat that discussion confidentially is probably of enough value in and of itself. And maybe (s)he can do even more.






      share|improve this answer



























        7














        In the comments you mentioned that getting an ombudsperson involved was not an option for you. However, your advisor does not necessarily need to know that you talked to the ombudsperson. Ombudspersons are often required to keep discussions confidential unless you explicitly tell them otherwise. You of course need to check that before with your ombudsperson before you go that route. Just discussing your options face to face with another person who has to treat that discussion confidentially is probably of enough value in and of itself. And maybe (s)he can do even more.






        share|improve this answer

























          7












          7








          7







          In the comments you mentioned that getting an ombudsperson involved was not an option for you. However, your advisor does not necessarily need to know that you talked to the ombudsperson. Ombudspersons are often required to keep discussions confidential unless you explicitly tell them otherwise. You of course need to check that before with your ombudsperson before you go that route. Just discussing your options face to face with another person who has to treat that discussion confidentially is probably of enough value in and of itself. And maybe (s)he can do even more.






          share|improve this answer













          In the comments you mentioned that getting an ombudsperson involved was not an option for you. However, your advisor does not necessarily need to know that you talked to the ombudsperson. Ombudspersons are often required to keep discussions confidential unless you explicitly tell them otherwise. You of course need to check that before with your ombudsperson before you go that route. Just discussing your options face to face with another person who has to treat that discussion confidentially is probably of enough value in and of itself. And maybe (s)he can do even more.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 8 hours ago









          Maarten BuisMaarten Buis

          22.2k34970




          22.2k34970





















              5














              The first step in solving this issue is going to be convincing a senior third party that there is a problem. This third party could be:



              • The head of department

              • Your supervisor (if you have one)

              • An ombudsperson

              • A faculty member of the same ethnicity as you

              Tell them you have a personal issue and need their help and their confidence. Odds are, they will be willing to help you.



              Be warned that evidence will be paramount in this kind of dispute. The odds are high that he'll deny he's discriminating, and he might even be able to provide some evidence for that (for example, perhaps he's supervised a student of the same ethnicity as you, possibly wears the same clothes as you, and that student had a positive experience). You will need convincing evidence of your own. As of time of writing, there's nothing convincing in the question statement.



              If you don't have that evidence, start collecting it. For example something like this:




              On 27 April 2019, I approached him with [solution] to [problem]. He laughed and said in the presence of other students that it's not surprising someone of [your ethnicity] would come up with something that will not work. I later proved him wrong by showing that the solution indeed works.




              The more such incidents you can document, the more compelling your case will be.






              share|improve this answer



























                5














                The first step in solving this issue is going to be convincing a senior third party that there is a problem. This third party could be:



                • The head of department

                • Your supervisor (if you have one)

                • An ombudsperson

                • A faculty member of the same ethnicity as you

                Tell them you have a personal issue and need their help and their confidence. Odds are, they will be willing to help you.



                Be warned that evidence will be paramount in this kind of dispute. The odds are high that he'll deny he's discriminating, and he might even be able to provide some evidence for that (for example, perhaps he's supervised a student of the same ethnicity as you, possibly wears the same clothes as you, and that student had a positive experience). You will need convincing evidence of your own. As of time of writing, there's nothing convincing in the question statement.



                If you don't have that evidence, start collecting it. For example something like this:




                On 27 April 2019, I approached him with [solution] to [problem]. He laughed and said in the presence of other students that it's not surprising someone of [your ethnicity] would come up with something that will not work. I later proved him wrong by showing that the solution indeed works.




                The more such incidents you can document, the more compelling your case will be.






                share|improve this answer

























                  5












                  5








                  5







                  The first step in solving this issue is going to be convincing a senior third party that there is a problem. This third party could be:



                  • The head of department

                  • Your supervisor (if you have one)

                  • An ombudsperson

                  • A faculty member of the same ethnicity as you

                  Tell them you have a personal issue and need their help and their confidence. Odds are, they will be willing to help you.



                  Be warned that evidence will be paramount in this kind of dispute. The odds are high that he'll deny he's discriminating, and he might even be able to provide some evidence for that (for example, perhaps he's supervised a student of the same ethnicity as you, possibly wears the same clothes as you, and that student had a positive experience). You will need convincing evidence of your own. As of time of writing, there's nothing convincing in the question statement.



                  If you don't have that evidence, start collecting it. For example something like this:




                  On 27 April 2019, I approached him with [solution] to [problem]. He laughed and said in the presence of other students that it's not surprising someone of [your ethnicity] would come up with something that will not work. I later proved him wrong by showing that the solution indeed works.




                  The more such incidents you can document, the more compelling your case will be.






                  share|improve this answer













                  The first step in solving this issue is going to be convincing a senior third party that there is a problem. This third party could be:



                  • The head of department

                  • Your supervisor (if you have one)

                  • An ombudsperson

                  • A faculty member of the same ethnicity as you

                  Tell them you have a personal issue and need their help and their confidence. Odds are, they will be willing to help you.



                  Be warned that evidence will be paramount in this kind of dispute. The odds are high that he'll deny he's discriminating, and he might even be able to provide some evidence for that (for example, perhaps he's supervised a student of the same ethnicity as you, possibly wears the same clothes as you, and that student had a positive experience). You will need convincing evidence of your own. As of time of writing, there's nothing convincing in the question statement.



                  If you don't have that evidence, start collecting it. For example something like this:




                  On 27 April 2019, I approached him with [solution] to [problem]. He laughed and said in the presence of other students that it's not surprising someone of [your ethnicity] would come up with something that will not work. I later proved him wrong by showing that the solution indeed works.




                  The more such incidents you can document, the more compelling your case will be.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered 8 hours ago









                  AllureAllure

                  36k19104160




                  36k19104160





















                      4















                      I am kind of frustrated, trying to be amicable. Of course, there are other members in the project who appreciate me, but this senior researcher has clout over them.




                      First, it's important that you maintain these good relations with the people who appreciate you. If you feel comfortable with it, you could try to discuss the issue with them: this way you would get a more neutral point of view, and if they confirm your feeling of being discriminated against you have a more solid reason to act on it. Assuming some of them are more experienced, they can also provide you with advice knowing the specifics of the situation.




                      what I ever propose or speak, and he tries to illustrate that I am doing nothing new.



                      Although I have proven for the second time that there is a limitation in the study, he doesn't listen. I have witnessed that he respects and appreciates Asian students more than me.




                      Second, I would suggest that you try to assess this potential bias as carefully and objectively as possible by being "extremely professional" yourself. This is not easy, but it's worth clarifying the nature of the bias, especially if you consider making a complaint but also simply for your own peace of mind. The idea is to be extremely rigorous in whatever you present to this person. For instance when you have an idea to propose, prepare a written report with the points you want to make: what is the main problem, why it matters, what is the solution that you propose, all of this preferably backed by references in the literature and showing the novelty (btw this can also help you write a paper or your PhD later). By doing this you take the discussion to a professional level, as opposed to the grey area of intuitions/opinions. This will make your arguments clear and precise, so that it's harder for the senior researcher to dismiss them without themselves making the effort of replying in detail. It also shows effort on your part, so it would make any bias in favor of other students' ideas much more obvious comparatively. Finally, there's even an (admittedly small) chance that your efforts would cause this person to realize their bias and change their behaviour in the future.



                      I hope this helps.






                      share|improve this answer























                      • thank for this answer! actually, I am trying to be as professional as much as I can and don't commit mistakes, it takes me time to make a rigorous proof and that is my end goal.

                        – Monkia
                        1 hour ago















                      4















                      I am kind of frustrated, trying to be amicable. Of course, there are other members in the project who appreciate me, but this senior researcher has clout over them.




                      First, it's important that you maintain these good relations with the people who appreciate you. If you feel comfortable with it, you could try to discuss the issue with them: this way you would get a more neutral point of view, and if they confirm your feeling of being discriminated against you have a more solid reason to act on it. Assuming some of them are more experienced, they can also provide you with advice knowing the specifics of the situation.




                      what I ever propose or speak, and he tries to illustrate that I am doing nothing new.



                      Although I have proven for the second time that there is a limitation in the study, he doesn't listen. I have witnessed that he respects and appreciates Asian students more than me.




                      Second, I would suggest that you try to assess this potential bias as carefully and objectively as possible by being "extremely professional" yourself. This is not easy, but it's worth clarifying the nature of the bias, especially if you consider making a complaint but also simply for your own peace of mind. The idea is to be extremely rigorous in whatever you present to this person. For instance when you have an idea to propose, prepare a written report with the points you want to make: what is the main problem, why it matters, what is the solution that you propose, all of this preferably backed by references in the literature and showing the novelty (btw this can also help you write a paper or your PhD later). By doing this you take the discussion to a professional level, as opposed to the grey area of intuitions/opinions. This will make your arguments clear and precise, so that it's harder for the senior researcher to dismiss them without themselves making the effort of replying in detail. It also shows effort on your part, so it would make any bias in favor of other students' ideas much more obvious comparatively. Finally, there's even an (admittedly small) chance that your efforts would cause this person to realize their bias and change their behaviour in the future.



                      I hope this helps.






                      share|improve this answer























                      • thank for this answer! actually, I am trying to be as professional as much as I can and don't commit mistakes, it takes me time to make a rigorous proof and that is my end goal.

                        – Monkia
                        1 hour ago













                      4












                      4








                      4








                      I am kind of frustrated, trying to be amicable. Of course, there are other members in the project who appreciate me, but this senior researcher has clout over them.




                      First, it's important that you maintain these good relations with the people who appreciate you. If you feel comfortable with it, you could try to discuss the issue with them: this way you would get a more neutral point of view, and if they confirm your feeling of being discriminated against you have a more solid reason to act on it. Assuming some of them are more experienced, they can also provide you with advice knowing the specifics of the situation.




                      what I ever propose or speak, and he tries to illustrate that I am doing nothing new.



                      Although I have proven for the second time that there is a limitation in the study, he doesn't listen. I have witnessed that he respects and appreciates Asian students more than me.




                      Second, I would suggest that you try to assess this potential bias as carefully and objectively as possible by being "extremely professional" yourself. This is not easy, but it's worth clarifying the nature of the bias, especially if you consider making a complaint but also simply for your own peace of mind. The idea is to be extremely rigorous in whatever you present to this person. For instance when you have an idea to propose, prepare a written report with the points you want to make: what is the main problem, why it matters, what is the solution that you propose, all of this preferably backed by references in the literature and showing the novelty (btw this can also help you write a paper or your PhD later). By doing this you take the discussion to a professional level, as opposed to the grey area of intuitions/opinions. This will make your arguments clear and precise, so that it's harder for the senior researcher to dismiss them without themselves making the effort of replying in detail. It also shows effort on your part, so it would make any bias in favor of other students' ideas much more obvious comparatively. Finally, there's even an (admittedly small) chance that your efforts would cause this person to realize their bias and change their behaviour in the future.



                      I hope this helps.






                      share|improve this answer














                      I am kind of frustrated, trying to be amicable. Of course, there are other members in the project who appreciate me, but this senior researcher has clout over them.




                      First, it's important that you maintain these good relations with the people who appreciate you. If you feel comfortable with it, you could try to discuss the issue with them: this way you would get a more neutral point of view, and if they confirm your feeling of being discriminated against you have a more solid reason to act on it. Assuming some of them are more experienced, they can also provide you with advice knowing the specifics of the situation.




                      what I ever propose or speak, and he tries to illustrate that I am doing nothing new.



                      Although I have proven for the second time that there is a limitation in the study, he doesn't listen. I have witnessed that he respects and appreciates Asian students more than me.




                      Second, I would suggest that you try to assess this potential bias as carefully and objectively as possible by being "extremely professional" yourself. This is not easy, but it's worth clarifying the nature of the bias, especially if you consider making a complaint but also simply for your own peace of mind. The idea is to be extremely rigorous in whatever you present to this person. For instance when you have an idea to propose, prepare a written report with the points you want to make: what is the main problem, why it matters, what is the solution that you propose, all of this preferably backed by references in the literature and showing the novelty (btw this can also help you write a paper or your PhD later). By doing this you take the discussion to a professional level, as opposed to the grey area of intuitions/opinions. This will make your arguments clear and precise, so that it's harder for the senior researcher to dismiss them without themselves making the effort of replying in detail. It also shows effort on your part, so it would make any bias in favor of other students' ideas much more obvious comparatively. Finally, there's even an (admittedly small) chance that your efforts would cause this person to realize their bias and change their behaviour in the future.



                      I hope this helps.







                      share|improve this answer












                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer










                      answered 4 hours ago









                      ErwanErwan

                      3,71611017




                      3,71611017












                      • thank for this answer! actually, I am trying to be as professional as much as I can and don't commit mistakes, it takes me time to make a rigorous proof and that is my end goal.

                        – Monkia
                        1 hour ago

















                      • thank for this answer! actually, I am trying to be as professional as much as I can and don't commit mistakes, it takes me time to make a rigorous proof and that is my end goal.

                        – Monkia
                        1 hour ago
















                      thank for this answer! actually, I am trying to be as professional as much as I can and don't commit mistakes, it takes me time to make a rigorous proof and that is my end goal.

                      – Monkia
                      1 hour ago





                      thank for this answer! actually, I am trying to be as professional as much as I can and don't commit mistakes, it takes me time to make a rigorous proof and that is my end goal.

                      – Monkia
                      1 hour ago

















                      draft saved

                      draft discarded
















































                      Thanks for contributing an answer to Academia Stack Exchange!


                      • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

                      But avoid


                      • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

                      • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

                      To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




                      draft saved


                      draft discarded














                      StackExchange.ready(
                      function ()
                      StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2facademia.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f129708%2fdiscriminated-by-senior-researcher-because-of-my-ethnicity%23new-answer', 'question_page');

                      );

                      Post as a guest















                      Required, but never shown





















































                      Required, but never shown














                      Required, but never shown












                      Required, but never shown







                      Required, but never shown

































                      Required, but never shown














                      Required, but never shown












                      Required, but never shown







                      Required, but never shown







                      Popular posts from this blog

                      Magento 2 duplicate PHPSESSID cookie when using session_start() in custom php scriptMagento 2: User cant logged in into to account page, no error showing!Magento duplicate on subdomainGrabbing storeview from cookie (after using language selector)How do I run php custom script on magento2Magento 2: Include PHP script in headerSession lock after using Cm_RedisSessionscript php to update stockMagento set cookie popupMagento 2 session id cookie - where to find it?How to import Configurable product from csv with custom attributes using php scriptMagento 2 run custom PHP script

                      Can not update quote_id field of “quote_item” table magento 2Magento 2.1 - We can't remove the item. (Shopping Cart doesnt allow us to remove items before becomes empty)Add value for custom quote item attribute using REST apiREST API endpoint v1/carts/cartId/items always returns error messageCorrect way to save entries to databaseHow to remove all associated quote objects of a customer completelyMagento 2 - Save value from custom input field to quote_itemGet quote_item data using quote id and product id filter in Magento 2How to set additional data to quote_item table from controller in Magento 2?What is the purpose of additional_data column in quote_item table in magento2Set Custom Price to Quote item magento2 from controller

                      How to solve knockout JS error in Magento 2 Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern) Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Unicorn Meta Zoo #1: Why another podcast?(Magento2) knockout.js:3012 Uncaught ReferenceError: Unable to process bindingUnable to process binding Knockout.js magento 2Cannot read property `scopeLabel` of undefined on Product Detail PageCan't get Customer Data on frontend in Magento 2Magento2 Order Summary - unable to process bindingKO templates are not loading in Magento 2.1 applicationgetting knockout js error magento 2Product grid not load -— Unable to process binding Knockout.js magento 2Product form not loaded in magento2Uncaught ReferenceError: Unable to process binding “if: function()return (isShowLegend()) ” magento 2