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| View Poll Results: should exclusive teams be allowed in FIRST? | |||
| YES |
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224 | 56.85% |
| NO |
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170 | 43.15% |
| Voters: 394. You may not vote on this poll | |||
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#106
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Re: Are all girl FIRST team counterproductive to the philosophy of FIRST?
Accidentally clicked "no", since the question posed by the poll is opposite that posed by the thread title.
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#107
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Re: Are all girl FIRST team counterproductive to the philosophy of FIRST?
Short answer to the thread title: no, as long as there are similar opportunities for males (having to start a new team does not count as a "similar opportunity").
I was going to pepper this post with statistics from various US & European studies on gender balance in STEM education, and Engineering in particular, but they all show the same trend, so I'll just summarize. While the percentage of women earning Bachelor degrees in Engineering has increased over the past 3 decades (roughly doubling), there is still a minority (~20%) female enrollment in Engineering degrees. However this is within a broader trend of a declining number of Engineering degrees awarded. So perhaps, to poorly paraphrase the great Dave Lavery and others, we shouldn't be spending out time focusing on how to split the small pie we have in front of us, but on how to make the pie much bigger. Mandatory class war comment. One set of data I couldn't easily locate was a reliable analysis of socioeconomic status on STEM education. But I would hazard that a female from a wealthy family attending a private girls' school has significantly more likelihood of attending college and completing a STEM degree than almost any "privileged" white male from the other end of the socio-economic spectrum. |
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#108
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Re: Are all girl FIRST team counterproductive to the philosophy of FIRST?
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Ya think? Jane |
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#109
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Re: Are all girl FIRST team counterproductive to the philosophy of FIRST?
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I'm not trying to be condescending, although I am sure my irritation is coming through in my posts. It's hard not to let some frustration rise to the surface when someone compares being accidentally called a "lady" in a high school marching band to the experience of a woman contending with the kind of discrimination that can ruin her career. This is the stuff of my life -- not some abstract theorem that I can discuss without any emotional involvement. (I know I know, us silly laydeez and our craaazy emotions!!1!11 ) <-- just a joke, not trying to put words in your mouthQuote:
-- Jaine *not saying that this is the case in EVERY engineering job... there are many great companies for women to work, and a lot of supportive men out there. But these are real experiences that come from actual colleagues of mine... different workplaces can vary widely in their supportiveness/hostility, and sometimes the workplace dynamic doesn't end up being as supportive as it seemed initially. Last edited by Jaine Perotti : 03-29-2011 at 12:24 AM. |
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#110
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Re: Are all girl FIRST team counterproductive to the philosophy of FIRST?
Karen (842) is up there in my book....
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#111
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Re: Are all girl FIRST team counterproductive to the philosophy of FIRST?
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Kara from 1189, Nikki from 2016, Stephanie from 1323 all come to mind. And I have no idea how people can forget Kyle Hughes, mentor of 27, Team RUSH. |
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#112
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Re: Are all girl FIRST team counterproductive to the philosophy of FIRST?
Final post to Jaine(if you'd like to discuss this further, I'll be happy to do so in PM because we are kind of starting to derail this thread into a person discussion):
"What's the use in labeling something "____ist" when it doesn't contribute to the oppression of a group?" The point is using the appropriate word. I've yet to figure out what dictionary your using to define sexism. I've checked two online and neither have come with the implications that you make. "I'm not going to try to tell you that the things you have gone through weren't difficult or challenging, but as you admitted yourself -- what you've described hardly comes close to being representative of the kinds of institutionalized discrimination women face in engineering." I wasn't referring to my experience being on par with a woman in the workplace but with girls joining a robotics team. And I assure you that my experiences went much farther then simply being mistakenly referred to as a lady. There were alot of things I went through that could be direct parallels to what is seen by the things girls have gone through. "I'm not trying to be condescending, although I am sure my irritation is coming through in my posts. It's hard not to let some frustration rise to the surface when someone compares being accidentally called a "lady" in a high school marching band to the experience of a woman contending with the kind of discrimination that can ruin her career. This is the stuff of my life -- not some abstract theorem that I can discuss without any emotional involvement." Some of the best advice I've been given on this forum comes from JaneYoung. She once said that she often takes a day or two before making a post to think the post over. She could tell you why better then I can, but I've tried to do that for anything that I feel so close to that I can't think objectively. Honestly if you can't discuss a topic without getting frustrated, you should wait for your anger to settle before posting. Honestly, you've had good points but your posts have been anything but professional. "Big difference between the words of Dr. King and the things you said to me. Dr. King had visions of a dream world which did not yet (and still does not) exist. You tried to tell me that the dream has already arrived, when I know for a fact that it has not." I'm not suggesting I am Dr. King. Far from it, I'd be happy to be a fraction of the man he was. I don't believe my words are all just a dream. Yes, it isn't everywhere yet. But there are places that have figured out how to have a co-ed environment without unchecked sexism. That is what exists today. I fully admit that I am strongly idealistic but that doesn't mean that what I see doesn't already partly exist. Final note: I am not posting anymore responses directly to Jaine in this thread simply because this is meant to be a public forum rather then a conversation between two. I will gladly discuss things via PM if you wish Jaine. Jason |
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#113
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Re: Are all girl FIRST team counterproductive to the philosophy of FIRST?
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There are some powerful egos in the FRC community. Those egos may drive innovation and continue to raise the bar. They may do that by challenging each other and themselves. I can't seem to identify those egos in any women in FRC that I know, have met, or have heard of. What makes the ego? Can it be developed? Can it be transplanted or inspired? But - keep the list of outstanding women/young women coming. It's awesome. Jane Last edited by JaneYoung : 03-29-2011 at 12:53 AM. |
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#114
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Re: Are all girl FIRST team counterproductive to the philosophy of FIRST?
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I would like to apologize to anyone I offended with my comments, I just thought to even suggest being on an all woman's tea, would be because of or reflect a handicapped state was bothersome, and wanted to share my pro-female feelings. By definition I am sexist, I would rather work with women than men, I don't think its a negative thing either. And the all girls team that one chairman's at BAE a few year's back was an absolutely awesome story. One of my favorite chairman's announcements I've ever heard. Last edited by mwtidd : 03-29-2011 at 08:54 AM. |
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#115
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Re: Are all girl FIRST team counterproductive to the philosophy of FIRST?
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I don't know, this one line really tripped me up. Just my $0.02. Cass |
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#116
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Re: Are all girl FIRST team counterproductive to the philosophy of FIRST?
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I'm an avid believer that "you are what you think you are", so if you think you're a rock star mentor, then you act like rock star mentor and eventually you become a rockstar mentor. You don't necessarily need to have a bad ego, or one where you think that you're the best, you just need to believe in what you're able to do... Or something like that. -Dustin. |
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#117
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Re: Are all girl FIRST team counterproductive to the philosophy of FIRST?
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Cass |
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#118
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Re: Are all girl FIRST team counterproductive to the philosophy of FIRST?
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Last edited by Karthik : 03-29-2011 at 05:00 PM. Reason: Typo |
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#119
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Re: Are all girl FIRST team counterproductive to the philosophy of FIRST?
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Honestly, I never asked any of my interviewers or employers if my gender had anything to do with it, as I had the confidence that my skillset and knowledge would set me apart, even if it was possible that my gender is what got me in the door. Frankly I dont care if it was my gender or that they liked the purple font I printed my name in. It gave me a chance to discuss my real potential. My frustration with these girls that "use their gender instead of their brain" is that when they get into industry and start doing that, men in engineering start (understandably so) stereotyping all women into that category, so when they see a woman added to the team, they automatically assume that means that the men are going to have to do more work to compensate for the female. Or that men can end up assuming women got a promotion simply because of their gender, not because they worked insanely hard (I saw this happen after a female who "didnt work for it" got promoted). THAT is what bothers me. The women who create that name for those of us who have worked hard to get where we are, and use our brains. I believe that there is probably a much higher percentage of women who use their brains, but it only takes working with a few who don't and a not-so-open mind to create the stereotype when there are so few of us to begin with. So I wont pretend to deny that my gender may have gotten me advantages to get my foot in the door, though I dont know that for a fact. I wouldnt say I deliberately "took advantage" of that, I think its just a possible fact that I would not refute. In reality, its likely my resume that got me where I was and am, but I know that companies are actively hunting for women & minorities that meet their needs, so I simply acknowledge the possibility. Phcullen - I'm just curious, on your team, how many girls are on your pit crew? on your drive team? how many have YOU actively brought & encouraged into a technical role? Quote:
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And really, this rings true in industry as well. I have only known one female at a Director level in my career... and she certainly had an ego. But females willing to have/use an ego like their male counterparts is few & far between. I forget the actual saying, but its something like "A man with an ego is considered a leader, a woman with an ego is considered a..." well you fill in the blank. And perhaps we need to change that. P.S. Karthik answered this one better than I, but I didnt catch it as I was typing ![]() Last edited by Kims Robot : 03-29-2011 at 09:44 AM. |
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#120
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Re: Are all girl FIRST team counterproductive to the philosophy of FIRST?
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Mentoring at its best is a 2-way street. |
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