Fragena A. Shannon, an African-American woman, claims Ford Motor Company failed to promote her to supervisor because of her race and sex. She appeals the District Court’s 1 order granting summary judgment for Ford. The District Court held that Ms. Shannon had failed to establish a prima facie case of race discrimination under 42 U.S.C. § 1981, and that she had not exhausted her administrative remedies for her Title VII sex-discrimination claim. We affirm.
I.
In early 1985, Ms. Shannon was an “assembler” at Ford’s Twin Cities plant. Assemblers are “non-skilled” workers, paid by the hour. In March, Ms. Shannon learned that Ford was accepting applications for salaried, supervisor positions, and she applied for the job. Ms. Shannon successfully completed the required skill-assessment process, which Ford calls the “Manufacturing Supervisor *681 Selection System” (“MSSS”), and Ford put her on the waiting list for a supervisor position. Also in 1985, Ms. Shannon applied for an apprenticeship in the skilled-trades program operated jointly by Ford and her union, the United Auto, Aerospace, and Agricultural Implement Workers of America (“UAW”). She once again passed the required tests, and was placed on another, entirely separate, waiting list for placement as an apprentice.
In the Fall of 1987, after ten months’ absence from work due to a broken ankle, Ms. Shannon was offered a position as an apprentice electrician. She was told, however, that she could not stay on the supervisor waiting list if she accepted the apprenticeship; she had to pick one or the other. Ms. Shannon says she protested, asking why she had to give up her spot on the list. Still, she decided to accept- the apprenticeship because “[she] didn’t want to pass up the opportunity of going into the skilled trades....” Ford then took her name off the list, and Ms. Shannon never tried to get back in line for a supervisor position.
In August 1989, Ms. Shannon filed a complaint with the St. Paul Department of Human Rights, alleging race and sex discrimination. She claimed that “throughout my apprenticeship ... I have been subjected to harassment and differential treatment.” 2 The Department, however, found “no probable cause” for her allegations. 3 Ms. Shannon lodged another complaint, also claiming race and sex discrimination, with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”) in November, 1989. In February 1992, the EEOC gave Ms. Shannon the right to sue.
In her three-count complaint, Ms. Shannon charged Ford with sex discrimination in violation of Title VII, race discrimination under 42 U.S.C. § 1981, and “reprisal discrimination” under the Minnesota Human Rights Act, Minn.Stat. § 363.01 et seq., and Title VII. All three counts rested on the same allegations: Ms. Shannon claimed that (1) she was subjected to a sexually hostile and abusive environment in the skilled-trades program; (2) she was not given adequate training in the program; (3) male apprentices enjoyed preferential treatment in training, education, and work assignments; and, finally, (4) she was not promoted to supervisor. Ford moved for summary judgment. In August 1994, the District Court granted Ford’s motion on Ms. Shannon’s failure-to-promote claims, but, after reviewing the litany of alleged insulting incidents during her apprenticeship, the Court denied the motion in all other respects. 4
Ms. Shannon now appeals the District Court’s decision, claiming that the Court erred by deciding that her failure-to-promote claim was not “reasonably related” to the sex-discrimination charges she filed with the EEOC, and by finding that she did not establish a prima facie ease that Ford failed to promote her because of her race. We review the District Court’s order granting summary judgment de novo.
*682 n.
Using the ubiquitous three-step burden-shifting framework set out in
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
We emphasize, however, that there is nothing magical about the
McDonnell Douglas
three-stage framework. The framework itself is simply a “sensible, orderly way to evaluate the evidence in light of common experience as it bears on the critical question of discrimination.”
Patterson,
The District Court stated that
even if
the removal of Ms. Shannon’s name from the waiting list was somehow improper or discriminatory, the fact remains that she could not be considered and rejected for promotion once her name was off the list, and therefore could not establish her prima facie ease. But if Ms. Shannon had produced any evidence that the removal of her name from the list was an act of intentional discrimination, aimed at preventing her promotion because she is black, then her failure to establish the usual prima facie case would not, by itself, doom her case. It would be ironic — bizarre, in fact — if a victim of discrimination were unable to vindicate her rights because she had the peculiar misfortune of being discriminated against in a way that necessarily prevented her from making her prima facie case. See
International Brotherhood of Teamsters v. United States,
*683
Winbush illustrates our point. In that ease, the District Court found overwhelming evidence that the defendants used “discretionary promotion policies [that] discouraged promotional opportunities for [the plaintiffs] and reflected systematic and purposeful discriminatory treatment of them based on their race.” Id. at 1480. The court also found evidence of a “hostile racial working environment.” Ibid. Despite this evidence, the defendants insisted that the plaintiffs had failed to prove that they applied for vacant positions, or that they were adequately certified by the Iowa Department of Personnel, or that they were denied a specific promotion. Id. at 1479. But given' the evidence of discrimination and considering all the relevant facts of the particular ease, we excused the plaintiffs’ failure to establish all the usual elements of the prima facie case. Id. at 1481-82.
Again, we agree with the District Court that Ms. Shannon did not establish her prima facie case. She was not rejected; she was merely taken off the list. But if Ms. Shannon could show that her removal from the list was discrimination in the guise of a race-neutral policy, if, for example, Ford put the “either/or,” “apprenticeship/supervisor list” choice to her, and not to similarly situated white employees, we would excuse her failure to make her prima facie case. In this case, however, Ms. Shannon has produced no evidence that Ford’s reason for not promoting her is a sham. She does argue that she did not ask or want to have her name taken off the list. This is irrelevant. She accepted the apprenticeship knowing her name would be taken off; it doesn’t matter that she would have preferred that it stay on.
Ms. Shannon also suggests that Ford’s discriminatory intent is proved by the fact that there has never been a black female supervisor at the Twin Cities plant. And she claims that Ford promoted 27 white workers to supervisor after she became a candidate in 1985, 15 of them after she returned to work in 1987. All this, Ms. Shannon argues, shows Ford’s discriminatory intent in “steering” her into the skilled-trades program. These claims are completely unsupported. The evidence Ms. Shannon cites for her assertion that 15 white people were promoted to supervisor since 1987 makes no reference to the race of these persons. And even if 15 white people were promoted, Ms. Shannon must show that these people were similarly situated to her, yet treated differently, to prove intentional discrimination. See
Williams v. Ford Motor Co.,
We conclude that, unlike the plaintiffs in
Winbush,
Ms. Shannon has presented no evidence of intentional discrimination which might excuse her failure to establish the four elements of the
Patterson
prima facie case. See
Chambers,
III.
The District Court held that Ms. Shannon’s Title VII sex-discrimination claim was barred because she did not exhaust her administrative remedies. The Court found that Ms. Shannon complained to the EEOC and the St. Paul Department of Human Rights about harassment and differential treatment in the apprenticeship program only, not in the promotion process. Ms. Shannon’s claim that Ford refused to promote her to supervisor because she is a woman is not, the District Court reasoned, “reasonably related to the substance of [Ms. Shannon’s] prior administrative charges.”
Ford suggests, albeit tepidly, that Ms. Shannon waived her right to appeal this holding because she never responded to Ford’s “failure to exhaust” argument in the District Court. Ford relies on the uncontroversial general rule that the courts of appeals “do not consider arguments raised for the first time on appeal.” See,
e.g., Dorothy J. v. Little Rock School District,
[w]hen an issue was actually decided in the trial court, even though not expressly raised by the parties, the rule against consideration of the question on appeal loses a good deal of its force. It is not unfair to a trial court for an appellate court to decide a question that the trial court actually reached in its opinion....
Ibid. In this case, we do not think it would show any disrespect to the District Court, nor would it be unfair to Ford, to address Ms. Shannon’s argument on the exhaustion issue.
Ms. Shannon did not exhaust her Title VII failure-to-promote claim. In general, “[e]xhaustion of administrative remedies is central to Title VII’s statutory scheme because it provides the EEOC the first opportunity to investigate discriminatory practices and enables it to perform its roles of obtaining voluntary compliance and promoting conciliatory efforts.”
Williams v. Little Rock Mun. Water Works,
In Ms. Shannon’s interview statement to the St. Paul Department of Human Rights, 7 she stated:
*685 While I had my broken ankle, there were openings in the skilled trades. I had taken the test and passed, but they were trying to avoid bringing me into the apprenticeship .... They were hiring people from outside. I had also done extremely well on the management test.
Ms. Shannon contends that her passing reference to the “management test” in effect incorporated her complaints about discrimination in the apprenticeship program into an admittedly inchoate failure-to-promote claim. We think Ms. Shannon was actually using her performance on the management test, and Ford’s hiring of “outside” people, to support her argument that Ford was “trying to avoid bringing [her] into the apprenticeship.” Also, Ms. Shannon’s EEOC claim alleges that Ford discriminated against her “in the terms and conditions of the apprenticeship program, harassment, training and pay.” We do not think that language, reasonably read, suggests an implicit failure-to-promote claim.
Ms. Shannon rightly reminds us that courts should not use Title VU’s administrative procedures as a trap for unwary
pro se
civil-rights plaintiffs. We agree, and therefore, when appropriate, construe civil-rights and discrimination claims charitably. This liberal-construction rale “stems from the rather fundamental policy that mere vagueness in a
pro se
claim should not sound the death knell for the plaintiffs discrimination allegation.”
Pickney v. American Dist. Telegraph Co. of Ark.,
This case is a lot like
Williams, supra.
In that case, the EEOC sent Ms. Williams a “right to sue” letter, authorizing a race-discrimination suit, but she failed to sue within 90 days of receiving the letter. Three years later, she complained to the EEOC again. The second complaint stated “I have been denied a promotion and a merit raise ... because I filed a previous charge of discrimination. I believe I am being retaliated against for filing the charge in violation of Title VII.”
Williams,
In Williams the plaintiff mentioned her unexhausted discrimination claim in her retaliation complaint. Ms. Williams claimed that she was retaliated against because she had complained about racial discrimination three years before. But this reference to her previous complaint was not enough to exhaust, for Title VII purposes, the discrimination claim. In this case, Ms. Shannon’s complaint with the St. Paul Department of Human Rights mentioned a “management test,” but this reference is an insufficient hook for her failure-to-promote claim. Her alleged and actual mistreatment by her colleagues and supervisors in the apprenticeship program, which is run jointly by Ford and the UAW, does not translate into or even relate to Ford’s alleged failure to promote her through the MSSS. The apprenticeship and supervisor programs are completely separate, run by different people using different standards. Perhaps the bias which allegedly infects Ford’s apprenticeship program also infects the MSSS, but we think the “reasonably related” standard requires more than this. We agree with the District Court that *686 Ms. Shannon failed to exhaust her sex-discrimination claim.
IV.
For the reasons discussed above, we affirm the District Court’s order granting summary judgment for Ford.
Notes
. The Hon. James M. Rosenbaum, United States District Judge for the District of Minnesota.
. It is undisputed that Ms. Shannon was, at times, poorly treated by some of her co-workers and supervisors in the skilled-trades program. For example, one journeyman showed Ms. Shannon a picture of a toilet and told her, "that's you down there with all the other [ ... ].” Another time, someone placed a sexually explicit "application for a date” at Ms. Shannon's work station. According to Ms. Shannon, when she reported the incident, her supervisor only laughed. Several times, in fact, she complained to her supervisors and to her union representative that she was being harassed and demeaned, and not receiving adequate training. One of her supervisors responded by telling her, "you are black and a woman, so you have two strikes against you. They don't want you [in the program] anyway.”
. The Department found that Ms. Shannon's "credibility has some weaknesses” and that Ford’s “skepticism regarding [Ms. Shannon’s] allegations that her poor work performance was caused by co-worker harassment and lack of training is supported by ... [Ms. Shannon's] excessive absenteeism ... [her] argumentative and emotional behavior ... [her] difficulty accepting directions and- her attitude that her assignments were menial....”
.Ms. Shannon's remaining claims were tried before a juiy. In September 1994, the juiy found for Ford on all these claims. Specifically, in special interrogatories, the juiy found that (1) Ford did not subject Ms. Shannon to unlawful sexual harassment, (2) Ford did not discriminate against her because of her sex, (3) Ford did not retaliate against her, and (4) Ford did not discriminate against her because of her race. These issues are not before us on appeal.
. Everyone agrees that supervisors are and may only be selected from among those employees on the supervisor eligibility list.
Lowe v. City of Monrovia,
. See also
Chambers v. Wynne School Dist.,
. Ford notes that Ms. Shannon failed to bring her Title VII case within 90 days of the closure of *685 the St. Paul investigation. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(f)(1). Ford concludes that Ms. Shannon therefore may not now rely on her St. Paul complaint. Given our decision, though, it makes no difference whether she relies on the complaint or not. The District Court decided that "neither the EEOC charge, nor that filed with the St. Paul Department of Human Rights, raises the issue of promotion to supervisor.” Given this conclusion, with which we agree, we see no reason for refusing to discuss the St. Paul complaint.
