[The] main problem here is that software development is not an individual sport. Assessing technical traits means that we are looking at candidates as individuals. At the same time, we will put them in a team context and the project's success will depend on their teamwork. A person's resume or LinkedIn profile says close to nothing about their team skills.
What's more, we know quite a lot about what makes teams effective. Anita Woolley's research on collective intelligence [DOI: 10.1126/science.1193147] [DX] provides extremely valuable insight on the topic. First of all, how do we define collective intelligence? It's basically the skill of a group to solve complex problems. Well, it sounds like the definition of everyday work for software development teams if you ask me.
Why is collective intelligence so important? Exploiting collective intelligence, as opposed to going with the opinion of the smartest person in a room, is a winning strategy. To put in Anita Woolley's words: "Collective intelligence was much more predictive in terms of succeeding in complex tasks than average individual intelligence or maximal individual intelligence."
(Score: 1, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 24 2017, @11:00PM (1 child)
Stop with this bullshit. Nobody is "assigned to the male gender." They are observed to be male or female because of their body parts.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 24 2017, @11:12PM
They are perceived to be male or female, sometimes mistakenly, on the basis of their body parts. When those parts don't meet a doctor's expectations, surgery is sometimes done:
(Wikipedia [wikipedia.org])