Tools you can keep
Four one-page cards, drawn straight from the lessons. Print them and pin them by the desk, or keep them as a checklist before you point an agent at real work. They're the course's disciplines in a form you can use without re-reading the lesson each time — the judgment still stays with you.
The redact checklist
From lessons 1.4 and 2.4 — the data question, and identity-blind where it matters.
Before an agent touches other people's data, ask the custody question, then strip what the job doesn't need. Redaction is the floor, not the roof — do it, and still test for the bias that rides in on proxies (Card 3).
Strip before you process — feed only job-relevant content
- Identity — name, photo, date of birth or age, home address. If the task is "match skills to a role", none of these are inputs.
- Protected-attribute signals — gender, ethnicity, marital or family status, nationality, religion. Leave them out unless the role genuinely requires them.
- Remember the limit — bias leaks back through proxies you can't redact: school, postcode, employment gaps, writing style. Redaction is necessary, not sufficient.
General education, not legal advice. If real exposure is on the line, talk to a qualified lawyer about your circumstances.
The criteria template
From lesson 2.3 — criteria, not vibes.
Write the criteria first, in your own words, before the agent runs. Criteria chosen after the fact just justify the answer you already have. The agent returns evidence against these — not a score, not a verdict.
This agent judges / decides…
The criteria — job-relevant, and only these
The agent returns…
Evidence and rationale against each criterion — including where it's unsure — not a score, ranking, or recommendation to agree with.
The person who decides (and could say no)…
A person handed evidence weighs it; a person handed a verdict rubber-stamps it. Criteria are what make the human gate real.
The bias-probe method
From lesson 3.2 — testing your agent.
For any agent that judges people, you can't tell if it's fair by looking. Measure. Two tests, on your own agent, before you trust it — and again as the tools underneath it change.
1 · The name-swap probe
- Take one application. Run it. Note the outcome.
- Change only the name — swap a male name for a female one, an obviously Pākehā name for an obviously Māori, Pasifika or Asian one. Change nothing else.
- Run it again. Does the outcome move? Repeat across a batch.
- If it moves, identity you thought you'd stripped is leaking through proxies. Document it.
2 · Adverse-impact test
- Measure outcomes across groups over a real batch — who the agent advances, who it filters out.
- Flag: the four-fifths (80%) rule — if a group's selection rate is under 80% of the highest group's, that's the established signal. (A US employment-law rule of thumb — a measuring stick, not New Zealand law.)
- In New Zealand the legal frame is indirect discrimination under the Human Rights Act: a neutral-looking practice that falls disproportionately on a protected group can be unlawful even with no intent.
General education, not legal advice.
When an AI reads your CV
The candidate one-pager — because everyone is, at some point, on the other side of someone else's agent. Share it.
There's a decent chance your next application is read first by a machine. You have more say than you think — but most of it is before you hit send.
Submit less — unless a role genuinely requires it, leave off
- Date of birth and age · a photo · your home address (a city is plenty) · marital or family status, nationality, religion.
Format so a machine reads you fairly
- Plain structure and clear headings — no text buried in images or columns a parser will scramble.
- Name the skills the role asks for, in plain words. Machines match; they don't read between the lines.
Ask three questions
- "Do you use AI or automated tools to screen applications?"
- "What happens to my data — is it stored, for how long, and does it go to an outside service?"
- "Can I ask for a human to review the decision?"
Once you've submitted, your control is limited, and there's no practical way today to trace where a CV travels — so the real leverage is before you send. General education, not legal advice.