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Unread 23-07-2012, 16:44
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Re: Research says: Feminine STEM role models do not motivate girls

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Originally Posted by Jessica Boucher View Post
Woah, woah, woah. Don't drive yourself nuts here. Your students will choose who they look up to, not the other way around. Just be yourself, be honest, and most importantly, be present. The best role models are the ones you can relate to.
Jess - I could not have said it better myself. I will admit that I too wonder sometimes if I am the "best" role model for the young women on our team... and I try to remind myself, each time I hear this question whispered in my mind, that I can only do my best... just like every other mentor. My answer is to try to relate to what they are looking for, sharing my experience, and helping them achieve their goals in whatever way I can.

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Originally Posted by Astrokid248 View Post
My point is that the people who make these motivational posters and videos need to be balanced in how they portray female STEM role models. For every video of how science makes your makeup, there needs to be a Rosy the Riveter out-muscling linebackers with a wrench or Sam Carter fixing old motorcycles after coming home from a hard day of interdimensional wormhole physics. And more to the original point of this thread, realism is the key here. The video from the original article? Faker than all the noses in Hollywood combined. That will turn most girls off simply because of how silly it all is.
I totally agree with this point as well... and I have seen it way too many times, oddly enough, from the Girl Scouts as well. Almost every science program they offer somehow relates STEM to makeup or some other very girly topic, totally alienating the girls who are actually interested in STEM in the first place. This has been a point of frustration expressed to me by many young women who have given up on scouts because of that lack of substance in their program.
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Unread 29-09-2015, 22:57
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Re: Research says: Feminine STEM role models do not motivate girls

My apologies in necro'ing a thread, but a spotlight post spoke to me, and I followed it, and I read, and I am called to post...

Inspiration can come from any angle - the key is to be there to fan it to a flame when the spark lands.

3946 currently has no female technical mentors (Wendy has a science degree, but her main role is with safety contracts, ordering shirts, and organizing transportation and lodging.) Despite this, we have consistently had about a 2:3 mix of girls and boys on the team right from year one.

Case studies: Victorija: I don't know how she was recruited, but she was one of our best mechanical students in 2013. She's now majoring in ME at LA Tech, her younger brother is on the team (heap big fundraiser last year as a freshman), and her mother drove me up to St. Louis last year. I've never seen nor met her father. She came to the team knowing what she wanted to do, and learned a good bit from us.

Robin: A great team member the last three years, and our most accomplished student solderer to date. Even though she decided that she needed to take a job this year rather than sticking with the team, she supported us through tryouts this fall to teach soldering. I have no idea whether her career will be in STEM, but I know I'm not the only mentor who will provide her with an excellent reference whatever she decides to do with her life. (OBTW, she was one of only two human players I know of who threw litter over an FRC defensive net in 2015, both at Bayou Semifinals match #2.)

Veronica: In the interest of full disclosure, my daughter. I was a bit surprised when she joined the team, as VJ has no interest in a STEM career (she's intending to become a signer for the deaf). She grew up in my home, and though she tried to deny geekhood, it was in the blood. (Though it didn't work out, her mother and I met at a science fiction convention.) When we earned a trip to St. Louis, her sales ability (from her mother or perhaps my brother, not me), raised her to second on the team (just behind Leevi, Victorija's brother).

MaryEllen: Wow! This is her sophomore year, but she's already shown me more capability than some of our graduates. I don't know what we did to deserve her, or to recruit her, but I fully expect her to be a success in whatever she decides to pursue. With two Mary Ellens per year, an eight-student team would probably be dominant at just about any regional. I don't know what inspired her, or what keeps her, but I'm hoping for a repeat.
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Last edited by GeeTwo : 29-09-2015 at 23:17.
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