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Re: [FRC Blog] Something New - SWE Grant
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Re: [FRC Blog] Something New - SWE Grant
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The way gender equality gets pushed confuses me so much. All students are to be given an equal chance regardless of their race or gender. |
Re: [FRC Blog] Something New - SWE Grant
I for one will not ever add students of a particular gender to my team nor put students of a particular gender in a particular role for the purposes of gaining eligibility for a grant.
If our current ratio of 12 females to 24 males, and our current leadership structure with females in charge of the public interaction, business operations, manufacturing, and design sectors of our team makes us ineligible, so be it. We'll need to look for funding elsewhere. |
Re: [FRC Blog] Something New - SWE Grant
Very amusing that many posts are stating what someone else should do with their money.
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Re: [FRC Blog] Something New - SWE Grant
Our team will continue to strive to provide excellent leadership opportunities, engineering opportunities, and professional experience to our female members rather than attempt to qualify for this grant. I imagine most FIRST teams will do the same. Encouraging affirmative action is neither gracious nor professional.
Now, to play a bit of devil's advocate, I think I can see SWE's line of thinking. Their goal may be to promote and grow programs where girls have ample opportunity to succeed. They may also think that their requirements (50%, female driver, etc.) indicate a program where girls have ample opportunity to succeed. I think this is strangely restrictive, but I can at least see their line of thinking. If a team is 50% female and at least one female is on the drive team, that team is almost certainly helping to give girls opportunities in STEM. It worry's me though that they think that an organization that doesn't meet those restrictions is not worth funding. As if having less than 50% and an all male drive team means that you MUST be prohibiting females from excelling (even if unintentionally). If this is true, it is disturbing and sets a terrible example for FIRST. Maybe there is another way to explain the restrictive requirements... |
Re: [FRC Blog] Something New - SWE Grant
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I think that a lot of the grant should also depend on if the females in question actually feel comfortable in the enviornment. Just because you do have a solid 50:50 or what have you ratio or a female on the drive team does not mean that all or even most girls on the team feel they are given the chance to speak their mind and allowed an equal chance to participate in what they want to participate inside the team. Especially if a team does try to get this grant by placing a female on the drive team and cause resentment with other members. Then it isn't really indicative of gender equality on the team. Hopefully the details of the grant or criteria are a lot more specific on the form. I understand why they thought it would be a good idea to create a grant like this, though. |
Re: [FRC Blog] Something New - SWE Grant
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It wasn't my intention to accuse or belittle with that statement. |
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Going back to the "driver" predicament, I don't feel like this is necessarily a measure of leadership for all teams. I understand they are 'seen' the most at competition and for some teams their leaders are all on drive team but that isn't a universal leadership title. I am not on drive team at competition, my strengths lay elsewhere, but that doesn't mean I am any less of a leader. I don't really know what term could have been used instead to ensure that the team is represented by a genuine female leader. Quote:
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Re: [FRC Blog] Something New - SWE Grant
It seems that whenever you target a group of people specifically you are always working on a flawed premise. We recruit mostly based on, do you want to join & are you old enough. Really the ideal way to recruit is to recruit, not to try to recruit more of this type of person or that type of person. The best you can do is make sure you are being fair.
I also think more people need to realize a lot of disparities are affected more by social implications. Whether or not the majority of FIRST teams are fair and non-discriminatory won't do as much as the media and culture do in encouraging an individual to pursue one path or another. |
Re: [FRC Blog] Something New - SWE Grant
I'm not sure what all of the fuss in this thread is. Some of us have been working for years to get a roughly even ratio. With that, girls will naturally make their way onto and off of a drive team.
Years ago I was against organizations which gave scholarships specifically to girls entering engineering in college. Why punish males for the decisions of the females' parents? Then I had an epiphany - the parents were the root cause and the female-only scholarships were merely a residual effect of someone trying to encourage a better balance. It was at that point I really got on board with some of the non-engineering things my team does. For a different and culture-based perspective, watch your favorite animated movie on any child-centric TV network. The TV ads that are aimed at children these days still fall along traditional gender role lines. It seems to me like there are two major ways to mitigate this: products like Goldie Blocks, or encouragement of parents to simply turn off the TV and put Legos in their daughters' hands. Full disclosure, we've had a girl on our drive team for 2 years now. This year we'll have a girl on the drive team and most likely a girl at human player. The girl on the drive team has shown a lot of maturity since her Sophomore year, which is why she's been on the drive team for longer than any other student in our history. Along the lines of what Libby said in her post, she is there because she is a remarkable decision maker, not because she's female. |
Re: [FRC Blog] Something New - SWE Grant
I would argue that this is an issue that needs to be fought culturally on a larger scale with stronger role models and legislation that prohibits or punishes gender-bent marketing and merchandising- but not within FIRST.
I'm a firm believer in a team that does not discriminate based on gender. Our team has had (brief) issues with mentors discriminating against women on the team and made sure that it would not happen again. That said, affirmative action - which is what providing financial incentives for teams that have specific roles (e.g driver) filled by women is- replaces one form of discrimination with another. During the Summer of 2013, I worked at NASA's goddard spaceflight center as an intern. One engineering intern I knew had been contacted for her role specifically because of her gender to keep her project in a 50/50 split. Knowing this made her feel like an impostor in her field- she was just as qualified as the men, but knowing that she had been picked for her gender made her feel otherwise. Working actively against active discrimination by making females feel welcome is excellent. Working against stereotypes is even better. Providing a financial incentive for teams to achieve gender equality (by cutting male members or recruiting more females) or for teams to promote females to positions of authority is, in my eyes, just plain wrong. |
Re: [FRC Blog] Something New - SWE Grant
Another issue that I face with this grant is that even if a team selects members/leaders/drivers without using the grant as a driving factor, the mere presence of these grant funds will lead others to assume that female leaders would not have their positions without the grant money. Unfortunately, these toxic, negative attitudes will be directed most pointedly at the female leaders themselves.
It's a sad reality, but it's something that I see all the time around things like college admissions for engineering schools trying to improve their gender ratio. If a guy gets in, he gets congratulated. Unfortunately, if a girl gets in, there will be people who tell her "you only got in because you're a girl, it's easier for a girl to get in there." This will be heard no matter how accomplished the girl in question is. This mere suggestion not only cheapens the achievement in her mind, but also can lead people to value the wrong things about themselves. I want my students, regardless of gender, to know without a doubt that if they earn a prestigious position within my team, that it's because they worked ridiculously hard to get there, and that they've accomplished great things. I want them to recognize the value of hard work, skill, dedication, and inspiration, and I want them to understand that no matter who they are, working at similar attributes will allow them to achieve anything they set their minds to. We will continue to push for increased involvement by all within our team, and continue to be mindful of and react to the unique societal pressures young girls can face when joining a robotics team in our approach to mentoring and supporting them, but we will not compromise the integrity of our team or undermine the hard work of each of our students in order to chase money and create feel-good stories. I want people to congratulate girls on FIRST teams in leadership positions on their technical and leadership accomplishments, and on being the best person for the job, instead of congratulating them for being girls on FIRST teams, and being the best girl for the job. It's a sad, widespread reality of our culture, which isn't really addressed by throwing money at teams that have already achieved a high level of diversity. These teams are the ones who need the extra influence the least, it's the people who will make derogatory assumptions about female students whose culture we need to work on. I don't really have an answer here besides solid mentoring and more role models, but I don't think cash incentives is it. I hope that the teams that receive this grant are aware of, and able to react effectively to, the negative attitudes and assumptions that some both outside, and potentially within, their teams will unfairly have towards female leaders who have worked incredibly hard to get where they are. |
Re: [FRC Blog] Something New - SWE Grant
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edit: Why driver and not captain? Not all teams assign a captain (ie 148), but all teams have to assign a driver. |
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