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#1
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Jane Cosmetics at 2014 Championship
Yesterday, FIRST uploaded this video -- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B_nZ...&feature=share -- to their YouTube account.
A quick Google search for "Jane Cosmetics robotics" leads to a number of puff pieces about their sponsorship of the event, with some being more accurate than others. http://www.nationswell.com/beauty-co...-change-world/ http://www.glam.com/jane-cosmetics-f...champtionship/ http://www.secondcitystyle.com/2014/...-championship/ http://blog.realtimestl.com/tag/jane-cosmetics-co/ I was not able to see opening ceremonies today because of work; did the representative from this company give a speech? What was its content? Given FIRST's recent focus on improving representation of minorities and women in FIRST and STEM, generally, the inclusion of this sort of messaging seems completely tone deaf and at odds with the work we've been doing elsewhere. I am really unhappy to see this. This is a big miss on FIRST's part. |
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#2
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Re: Jane Cosmetics at 2014 Championship
I saw this booth yesterday in the pits and was instantly confused. I guess I just don't really understand why they were at the event. In a place where it is heavily emphasized that both males and females are capable of doing the same work on teams, whether its on the organizational side or the technical side, it was strange to see something that is so gender-targeted and has seemingly nothing to do with FIRST's mission.
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#3
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The owner spoke at the Deans List ceremony. A truly inspiring speech!
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#4
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Re: Jane Cosmetics at 2014 Championship
Can you give a summary of it?
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#5
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I don't remember her name unfortunately. She has owned over 240 companies with over a billion in revenue. She and dean felt using some of her cosmetic and beauty companies to recruit from new sources.
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#6
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Re: Jane Cosmetics at 2014 Championship
Lynn Tilton was the speaker. Her speech didn't seem that out of the ordinary, just your typical "you students are building the future" stuff, and honestly wasn't that memorable. The speaker owned over 100 companies, with a whole bunch being in tech, defense, etc. fields, right inline with your run of the mill major FIRST sponsor. Curious why her FIRST connection seems to be done through this rather than any of her other endeavors.
Dean has been speaking a lot about how FIRST has to move beyond traditional sources of support in order to reach a wider audience. This certainty seems inline with this idea on paper, though execution seems to miss the mark on tone to some degree. Last edited by Joe G. : 25-04-2014 at 16:50. |
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#7
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Re: Jane Cosmetics at 2014 Championship
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What this is really about is part of the whole we need to get more people, both individuals and businesses, involved that aren't Science and Technology companies. While I'm not exactly crazy with the promo video FIRST released, I overall applaud this. We need to show the world that everyone has a place in FIRST, even if you don't directly plan on going into work with Science and Technology. It's not about getting kids into STEM Jobs, its about getting the world to appreciate and respect the importance of STEM. The fact that we have a company completely out of STEM recognizing this is HUGE, and I hope more companies not directly in STEM follow. |
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#8
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Re: Jane Cosmetics at 2014 Championship
Unfortunately -- and I'll try to find the things I've read that back this up -- emphasizing traditional gender expectations (like makeup, femininity, being pretty, etc.) as part of efforts to boost interest in STEM among girls often has a negative impact. Girls already feel a tremendous amount of pressure to conform to traditional standards of beauty, largely due to marketing efforts of companies like Jane Cosmetics, and asking them to cope with those pressures while dealing with the pressures incumbent in pursuing STEM as a girl serves to drive them away.
While there's nothing wrong with makeup or femininity inherently, it's when they become an expectation rather than an option that we get into trouble. Since those things are still very much part of the expectations our society places upon girls today, their presence at a FIRST event is misguided. FIRST should be presenting itself as an alternative; a place where girls can become competent, contributing members of society and nobody is going to care what they look like or act like while doing it. If, later, they want to put on the trappings of femininity, they should be able to do so all the while knowing that none of it will have any bearing on their value in making the world a better place. Broadening support for FIRST is laudable, but doing so at the expense of its core goals is a bad trade. |
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#9
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Re: Jane Cosmetics at 2014 Championship
Perhaps this could be viewed as a way to inspire girls who are using their products (the ones who are currently "conforming" to the traditional "norms") to take a look at something like FIRST and realize there is a place for them in the organization as well. I coach a team with 10 girls (out of 21 team members this year). Some of them are big into wearing make up and some are not, but they are ALL big into working on the robot and being a part of the team.
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#10
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Re: Jane Cosmetics at 2014 Championship
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tl;dr FIRST is trying to bring people in, not drive people out. |
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#11
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Re: Jane Cosmetics at 2014 Championship
Also, they were handing out Janes makeup sample packs to any females as they left the Deans List event.
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#12
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Re: Jane Cosmetics at 2014 Championship
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For me, make up isn't about trying to reach an arbitrary standard of beauty. I use it to express myself and my interests. My eyes and nails usually match my team colors. This weekend was spent in scholarship row so every day, my eyes have sported FIRST's colors. Life's short and make up comes in all kinds of colors. Why shouldn't I have fun with it? I enjoy wearing heels just as much, but I realize it's simply not practical to wear them all day to a competition. Neither fact should have any bearing on my abilities or my roles on my team. And as an aside, I'd rather do things like stripes or numbers on my face (or the face of others) in makeup because I know the products were intended to be used on the face. I've used inferior products that my students have reacted poorly too. I know what I'm getting into with makeup and I know the best ways to apply and remove it. |
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#13
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Re: Jane Cosmetics at 2014 Championship
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#14
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Re: Jane Cosmetics at 2014 Championship
Here's some reading as to why this may be harmful -- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stereotype_threat
This is very different from dissuading girls from participating because of how they express themselves or how they behave. Offering makeovers is, instead, a way of preying upon girls' insecurities and suggesting that, despite whatever success they may have had on their team and at the event, they will be better off still if they conform to some societal ideal of beauty. There is a marked difference between targeting girls that already have an interest in makeup and targeting girls with makeup and this seems very much like that latter. Edited to add: I don't necessarily care that a cosmetics company is sponsoring FIRST, really, but do take issue with offering makeovers during the event. A better, more meaningful approach might be to promote FIRST at cosmetics-related events rather than the other way around. All of that being said, having read a bit more about Ms. Tilton today, I am not really comfortable with her being anywhere near FIRST at all. I would not offer her as a role model for the students on our team. Last edited by Madison : 26-04-2014 at 00:43. |
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#15
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Re: Jane Cosmetics at 2014 Championship
I got the chance to talk to Lynn Tilton today, and what's been mentioned here is exactly her point.
Bring new people in, not drive existing out. Not only is Jane cosmetics a line with the 'buy one, give one' mentality, but if girls who are typically into 'girlier' things like makeup see FIRST through Jane, that could be a pretty good thing. I don't think anyone is saying FIRST girls have to look or be a certain way, but rather, let's find a new avenue to bring more girls into FIRST and get the FIRST community into it too. Personally, I'd love to go over there and try out the products - because if they're good, and Jane supports FIRST, I'll definitely buy. |
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