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Re: Discussion on All-Girl events
Alright.
I'm going to stray from my original intention of simply pointing out the massive difference in lunch discussions at the IndyRAGE event, and move on to something I've noticed a lot in recent posts. Most of the females talking about not getting into high-paying jobs because of male dominance, are mainly talking about jobs like Engineering, software design, business management, etc. But none of the aforementioned females pointed out that more women should be involved in male-dominated jobs such as: Oil drilling, Mining, Sheetrock Layers, or any "Down & Dirty" Jobs that possess similar pay. I find this to be unfair to the male population, for if you are pushing for equal rights, in order to get females into office-based jobs like the ones mentioned above, you should also be pushing for more in the physical labor. |
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Or you can continue being a misogynistic troll here and people will continue to tell you to $@#$@#$@#$@# off, even though those efforts clearly are in vain. Alternatively, delete your account. |
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Also, this whole thread began because of YOUR objection to a robotics event that featured women in STEM. Changing your arguments after losing your first isn't clever or mature. |
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Re: Discussion on All-Girl events
I understand the sentiments laid out by the OP. However, I do value the options of having events such as IndyRAGE to encourage females to take on roles that are not typically set aside for them.
FRC 4607 has a fairly large female segment (~40/60 this last season), and yet it is like pulling teeth to get some of the girls into the programming/fabrication side of things. Part of this is our collective issues with societal/cultural differences or perceived 'gender appropriations'. Another aspect is the lack of female mentors in these areas. We (4607) do try to include/encourage females into these areas - but even then they are subjugated (unwittingly) to meaningful tasks that demean these girls; i.e "take notes on this because you have better hand-writing". This drives me nuts. My concern this coming season is to get more females to transition from our Marketing/Business squads to the fabrication/design squads. In fact, one of our best fabricators this last season was a female. And she commanded respect from the males in the lab - because she was one of the best fabricators we have ever had. But I will state this - even as good as she was, she took a lot of crap. Not from the fabrication squad (don't get me wrong, she took some ribbing from the guys, but it was in a situation where she was able to give it back - and she had fun with it), but from the other females on the team. In fact, it got to a point that she wanted to quit because of her excelling amongst the boys. Again, not from the boys, but from the other females. After a very long talk, she decided to continue with the team. How can we prevent this type of female vs female bullying? Well, this is why we need these types of events - so that females can showcase their worth amongst their female peers. And so that other females can see that success in these fields are not only possible, but so that they can gain confidence. And that girls such as the aforementioned can gain POSITIVE notoriety amongst her peers. Just my 2 cents. |
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At this point, I think you're just a troll, and not genuinely worried about this event or rights and equal opportunity in STEM. |
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Second of all, what I find much more alarming than the handful of anonymous trolls, is the fact that somehow this guy has 4 rep bars!!! There are clearly some fairly high-rep CD accounts that support his garbage for him to have 4 rep bars after 8 posts, all of which are offensive comments on this thread. |
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The information is out there and is, quite frankly, very easy to find. If you don't want it to be true, that's another story. Discrimination isn't a myth. |
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A question that might help some folks who aren't used to managing systemic inequality and their piece in dismantling it: does anyone have any resources (specific to marginalized people in STEM, maybe) that others can use to learn more without women/PoC having to prove their marginalization?
Here are a few I have found: link a, link b, link c, link d (this one is a little more jargony and isn't specific to STEM). I am open to critiques on the choices of articles I am sharing as well as starting a collection of more resources to share with others. I am also open to PMs if anyone needs any help implementing change on their own team or needs support. |
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These certain posts are catalyzing the demise of the already dwindling hope I had left in the thread. Going back to the post about the pay gap - As others have cited there are a variety of sourcing offering information that it exists. I have done a lot of research on my own time about it and contacted several different agencies working on improving it. The number one cause I was able to conclude was that women under negotiating their salaries. Women tend to value themselves less and hence negotiate less as opposed to males who tend to overvalue themselves and negotiate for more. This comes down again to confidence, and multiple arguments on this thread work in favor of the argument women aren't as confident in their abilities even if they are objectively on or above par. That's why events like these help build females confidence and get them psychologically ready to deal with things like negotiating pay based on your confidence or retention in STEM after a small failure. |
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Please don't make this a bag day thread now. Though that might be an improvement. :) |
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The more experience I gain in the real world only shows me this couldn't be further from the truth. The number of opportunities available is not a fixed number, like it might be for an admissions office at a university. Growing a percentage of a population in engineering doesn't mean the rest of the engineering population needs to lose that percentage - the overall number can grow! Applying it to this example, adding a girls-only event doesn't take away any other opportunity a boy might have. Last point. In fields requiring a brain (creativity, critical thinking, etc.), diversity of thought is an admirable goal. If we can't approach a problem from every angle, we might not find the best solution. I don't have to think long to imagine life experiences that I have not and cannot experience simply because of my gender - and those are perspectives that I lack and cannot use in solving a problem. Imagine where the world could be and isn't because of the lack of diversity in engineering. |
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