> Is there anything wrong with preferring people who have spent a lot of time practicing leetcode?
If you care about diversity and inclusion, yes. This interview format prefers people with formal education, extra time, good mental health, no kids, etc.
This can easily eliminate some women + caregivers + those with kids, the self taught, people that struggle with mental health or learning disabilities (including ADHD), etc.
Anecdotal story:
Studying LC because I'm self taught led me into burn out and I ended up with an ADHD diagnosis (common for women to get diagnosed at an older age anyway). My ADHD brain wants to do things it likes and studying LC isn't one of them so it led to being burned out faster. A former manager even told me to slow down and I didn't listen!
I struggled for a while with interviews and getting my current job. Each additional interview became extremely traumatizing for me (which is probably compounded by Rejection Sensitive Dysphoria that comes with ADHD). It's been almost a year since I got my job and I still worry about interviewing again in the future.
For me, being a woman in tech with ADHD makes it really hard to walk into an interview feeling confident. It's intimidating to be obviously different then the vast majority of my interviewers and I'm so worried if I'll keep my train of thought and remember things or talk in a way that makes sense. And it spirals into me worrying if I make women in tech look bad because so many people seem to believe women are inherently worse.
If you care about diversity and inclusion, yes. This interview format prefers people with formal education, extra time, good mental health, no kids, etc.
This can easily eliminate some women + caregivers + those with kids, the self taught, people that struggle with mental health or learning disabilities (including ADHD), etc.
Anecdotal story: Studying LC because I'm self taught led me into burn out and I ended up with an ADHD diagnosis (common for women to get diagnosed at an older age anyway). My ADHD brain wants to do things it likes and studying LC isn't one of them so it led to being burned out faster. A former manager even told me to slow down and I didn't listen!
I struggled for a while with interviews and getting my current job. Each additional interview became extremely traumatizing for me (which is probably compounded by Rejection Sensitive Dysphoria that comes with ADHD). It's been almost a year since I got my job and I still worry about interviewing again in the future.
For me, being a woman in tech with ADHD makes it really hard to walk into an interview feeling confident. It's intimidating to be obviously different then the vast majority of my interviewers and I'm so worried if I'll keep my train of thought and remember things or talk in a way that makes sense. And it spirals into me worrying if I make women in tech look bad because so many people seem to believe women are inherently worse.