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#16
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Re: Attracting Females to STEM/FIRST
One thing I want to point out is that just saying "omg don't just encourage girls to join encourage EVERYONE to join!" is a relatively fair argument for encouraging shy students to stand up and become leaders, but it doesn't help girls specifically at all. Really, most actions that aren't specifically aimed at helping girls join/stay with FIRST is going to lead to a decline. Because gender-neutral recruitment/encouragement really draws in mostly boys, as STEM is still a male-dominated field, and is seen as a "manly" thing. To encourage girls to become leaders in STEM you really have to bring them in specifically.
Now Monochron makes a very good point; recruiting girls because you need diversity or statistics or whatever is worthless. It tells them "we want you only to be able to say we have you, we don't actually care what you gain out of this." Which is very bad, obviously. But at the same time, just gathering people to FIRST teams yields mostly guys in most cases. A masculine-associated activity is not going to bring many women unless you destroy the stigma that building is for men. There is no blanket solution for bringing girls into FIRST because girls are vastly different people and aren't some "species" to "understand." The simple answer is to encourage girls as individuals, and don't make them join because they're female and you need females (for your purposes), but for them to challenge themselves, get benefits that men have that they might not have before, and so they can get the full advantage afforded to them (for THEIR purposes). Even if you just have each girl on your team bring one or two of their friends onto the team next year, this can have a positive effect because these girls will be joining the team already knowing they have a friend or two, and won't be completely alone. TL;DR: Make girls understand that this is an incredible opportunity. Don't recruit them because they're female, recruit them because everybody deserves to be a part of FIRST. |
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#17
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Re: Attracting Females to STEM/FIRST
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#18
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Re: Attracting Females to STEM/FIRST
After being on a co-ed FIRST robotics team for 3 years I can definitely attest to the fact that it is a challenge to get girls interested in FIRST. My second year on my team I was the only girl, mentors included. Something unique to my situation though is that I never have felt alone or isolated on my team because of my gender. This year was my first year being a captain on the team and I have never felt disrespected or treated as less because of my gender. I wear makeup on a daily basis and I always have my nails painted and for the most part I see myself as a typical girl who is just really passionate about STEM and FIRST. I'm not really sure what to do to get more girls involved except to just continue to be accepting. I have always seen the Robettes (2177) as the coolest team at our regional competition because it excites me to see girls excel in this male dominated community. That being said most of the teams I have seen (at least in Minnesota) have a handful of girls on their team. I think the best way to get girls involved is to show them that FIRST isn’t only for boys and when they join a FIRST team not to treat them any different.
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#19
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Re: Attracting Females to STEM/FIRST
thegnat05 - If you want some help recruiting more females to your program, please let our team know. We've brought our robot and team to other schools to do demo's with that goal specifically in mind, and I know it's had success in recruiting more female students for other local area teams. I'm sure our captains would jump at the chance to help out!
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#20
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Re: Attracting Females to STEM/FIRST
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This is my general approach with boys as well, but I make a more concerted effort with girls because I know of the societal prejudice pushing them away. Quote:
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#21
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Re: Attracting Females to STEM/FIRST
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#22
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Re: Attracting Females to STEM/FIRST
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#23
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Re: Attracting Females to STEM/FIRST
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![]() What I am getting at is that the actual discussions you have with students (or the "media" that you put out) about your team should not include their gender at all. Doing so often alienates people more than it makes them feel included or motivated. Where you focus those discussions however should be based on which students face the most barriers to entry. |
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#24
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Re: Attracting Females to STEM/FIRST
It's not what you say, it's how you say it. We have to appeal to a female student's passion to care/want to help and show her how her personal skills add to making the world a better place for everyone. (As a female engineer, I am personally driven by and strive for positive impact; it is what motivates me and satisfies me as an engineer.)
While the other parts of FRC are also important, I personally want to see more of the female FRC students with their hands on the create/design/build of the robot. Yes, there is something to be said to what sammyjalex posted: I was just in a meeting yesterday where software was being discussed as the first topic, and there were about ten women in the room. The second meeting topic was a technical design, and there were only three women in the room - me being the only technical woman of the three who had been a member of the design team (there were three other women involved with the design, but they were not at the meeting). The other two women in the room were admin assistants. |
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#25
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Re: Attracting Females to STEM/FIRST
Yes, FLL has come up with some socially interesting challenges that are effective in gender-neutral recruiting. They seem to have boiled down to a robot running around doing something that fit into an appealing story about doing good.
So, now, many high-end (and the capability is quickly moving down market) automobiles can detect, warn and even effectively react to and avoid collision hazards. What is more socially responsible than preventing accidents? That technology has been lying around FRC for years. Such things should be part of the appeal of FRC to the students, independent of gender Perhaps FRC should not be a contact sport, but an avoid contact sport? Rig the bumpers, or no bumpers at all, with sensors that detect and report contact, and a scoring system that penalizes it? This end the inane arguments about the necessity of physical defense in the game (and the libelous assertions that any active (monetary) support of a pure offensive approach is heresy, and must be shouted down); true defense, as in the real business world, will be technology, finesse, influence and adaptability, not "my 6 CIM and n-speed gearbox will kick you your 4-CIM and n+1 speed gearbox around the field all day and into next week." The skills female humans exceed males at are "finesse, influence and adaptability." Let's reinforce the skills that are truly useful in life; muscular physical prowess is not something that counts in most commercial free markets or a corporate boardrooms. A lot of the aggression is necessary, some is required. Eviserating you opponent is not. Careful assessment of the player's motivations, and the ability to craft solutions where most of the parties involved win something near what they want, is what makes society better. |
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#26
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Re: Attracting Females to STEM/FIRST
The Killer Bees have had a team of 50% male and 50% female for the last three years. Here is what we do:
1. Recruit from FLL. These students already know FIRST and the fun of challenges and competitions. 2. Recruit students who were not in FLL. Some of these students have deep experience in how things work and they may have been in another program in middle school (Destination Imagination, VEX, other robotics programs, Science Olympiad, etc.) 3. Sell the program to the parents. The reality is that we need the parents to drive their students to and from meetings for about 2 years. If the parents are sold, then the students will be too. Some things we make sure the parents know about include the money for scholarships, the internships available to high school students, the skill development, the real-world applications of math and science, the reference letters our mentors will write for the students, the sense of belonging to something bigger than yourself, the list goes on. And we work with the parents of our student leaders to make sure they know what the time commitment is. 4. We have the students go recruit other students. The students arrange to demonstrate the robot during lunch periods, during the freshmen "meet and greet", during the last few days of the school year at the middle school and any other school event we can get to with the students and the robot. This has been our "secret sauce" in getting more girls to join the team. We send our current team members (girls and boys) and they go talk to their peer groups and the peer groups that are several years younger. 5. We do demonsrations in our community. When we are at an event, our students talk to everybody. "What high school do you think you will go to? School ABC? That's great - they are Team number xyz and their website is at .....com. You should make sure to contact them. " Once we have them recruited, this is how we retain them: Team selection: We initially prioritize selecting freshmen and sophomores for the team. This way, we have a chance to teach them over multiple years and we get a chance to know them well. Sometimes, we will have students apply to the team as juniors/seniors - and by then, we need these upperclassmen to be experts. We view this as a 4 year experience. At our initial meetings, we throw everyone out of the CAD/software/media rooms and put them in the shop. We have the upperclassmen show the NewBees how to make a bracket. In fact, we call them "Freshmen Brackets". Some of these brackets end up on the robot. In 2014, every student made a part for the robot. All 42 of them. Even the "Chairman's"/PR team. During their initial year on the team, we don't assign students to a subteam. We used to do this and when we did exit interviews with the students, we have been told that "You put me on the electrical team and I hated it. I wanted to program". We have an open structure where the team leads can have any number of students help them with a project or task and those students learn skills and concepts they might not have had a chance to learn before. This way, students learn across the spectrum - electrical, mechanical, machining, programming etc. We strongly believe in having students teach other students. If you teach it, you know it. And we do this year-round. Student are expected to participate in all 4 seasons (Fall - Pre Season, Winter - Build, Spring - Competition, Summer - Preparation) How does this get girls on the team and to stay on the team? Because they see that they can participate equally with any other student. We select leaders for our team who will do the best job. Because of this skill development, we have had had a 100% female drive team this year. Last year it was 33% female/66% male. In 2012, the drive team was 100% male. Next year it will be different. Especially when the NewBees are in the shop, the mentors will make sure everyone is comfortable. Some of the machines are scary. They go out of their way to show everyone how to properly operate the machines and they may need to do this more than once. They know that if they can get the students interested in what happens in the shop, then the students are hooked on this program and will stay. When we do have students leave the team before graduation, it has been from the group of students who do not have an interest in building the robots. During our wrap-up at the end of every meeting, every group reports on what they did. Most of the time, we make the newest Bee "stand and deliver" and the student leaders help guide them. This builds confidence in knowing what you are talking about. The team leaders make sure to give some type of positive feedback to the group in front of the rest of the team. This is our system that we have developed over many years. It works for us. TL; DR Do we specifically recruit girls to our team? Yes, we do. Do we specifically recruit boys to our team. Yes, we do. Julia |
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#27
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Re: Attracting Females to STEM/FIRST
I'm wondering if hands-on STEM focused camps could help attract females to STEM?
POWER Camp (Preparing Outstanding Women for Engineering Roles) is a National Summer Camp hosted at IUPUI in Indianapolis. It is open to incoming 9th graders to graduating high school seniors, it costs $210 (they have scholarships) and the students have to find their own way to get to the camp (they will pick you up and drop you off at the airport). They have had great success in getting girls interested in engineering careers and have had students from all over the US take part in the program. As part of POWER Camp students also get to visit the Indiana Robotics Invitational (IRI) on Friday from 9:30am - 1:00pm. They have 40 slots available and are starting to fill fast, I would love to see more FIRST students involved with the camp. PM me if you have more questions. Information Page: http://www.engr.iupui.edu/infofor/co...power-camp.php Application: http://www.engr.iupui.edu/infofor/co...0for%20web.pdf |
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#28
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Re: Attracting Females to STEM/FIRST
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Hands-on activities are the most powerful tool to spark the interest of female students in STEM. Keeping women in STEM careers is a whole other issue. This past December, I built toothbrush robots with about 170 female students in an engineering magnet program, telling the students that this is a lesson in creativity and design. There are no directions. That they could make their robot any way they want to make it with their kit of parts containing everything they needed. The only requirement is that it should move when they are finished. (KOP: 1 button battery, 1 pager motor, 1 toothbrush head, 1 rubber band, 2 googley eyes, 1 pipe cleaner, and hot glue.) We went through troubleshooting the battery and motor, c.g., and the creative design process. I'm watching for who gets it on their own right away, who works as a team, who copies off their neighbor, and who doesn't try at all. While some students want to socialize with each other the entire time. The students fill out a survey; It was the most well-liked workshop of the entire event. |
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#29
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Re: Attracting Females to STEM/FIRST
1710 does many things to encourage females to become a part of STEM related fields. We have our innovative YouGoGirl! program, which has returned outstanding results. Our team had only four girls when it was founded, now 15 of 41 team members are girls, and that number is growing. For more information check out some pages on our website.
http://www.onwravens.net/firstrobotics/you-go-girl/ http://www.onwravens.net/firstrobotics/trading-cards/ |
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#30
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Re: Attracting Females to STEM/FIRST
Any suggestions on how we can help encourage them to sign up?
I just saw some information on how to build those and thought it looked pretty interesting. What was the event and how long was that specific workshop? How does the 15 number break down in terms of the areas the girls are involved on the team? For example how many girls are involved with the building & design process, or in the pit at competitions, or on the drive team? I spent quite a bit of time talking with 1710 students at the CMP event this year and really enjoyed learning about your YouGoGirl! program! |
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