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#31
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Re: Attracting Females to STEM/FIRST
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From what I can tell a lot of teams that fare well with girls, also have good mentor-ship. Just like a shy or challenged student, I think for most girls it just takes more/better support or time. Quote:
Another interesting thing that I've heard/would like to read more about (probably will if I remember tonight) is biological differences if there are any or whether the majority of the gender differences comes because of societal norms. It seems as though at a young age, toys are also very gender-biased with girls playing a lot of things that are creative (tea/house) and boys playing with things that seem to be more structured and work a certain way. I'm curious (and I'm sure there are studies) as to why this is. I found this TED Talk interesting (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d77mMXahsME), as a mother she has an interesting perspective of having a baby boy vs. a baby girl. |
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#32
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Re: Attracting Females to STEM/FIRST
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I'm intrigued that you think the opposite. Creativity in roleplaying rather than creativity in creation. |
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#33
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Re: Attracting Females to STEM/FIRST
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The most important aspect is giving girls more time to participate and being conscientious about reaching past the first volunteer. It involves more mindfulness. It's almost making student leaders aware of taking these steps--leading by example. |
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#34
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Re: Attracting Females to STEM/FIRST
When my oldest daughter joined the team, she was half the girls on the team. One of the male students (who is now an excellent mentor and RI) handed her a piece of wood and said, "we need this cut x by y". She didn't have a clue how to do it so he showed her how to measure and cut. The next time they needed something cut it was handed to her and she did it on her own.
Don't treat the girls any different then you treat the guys. Give everyone a chance to learn each aspect and let them gravitate to what they like. My oldest daughter is now considering a career in Engineering because of her involvement on the team. This year our team was about 50/50 male/female and, with my youngest daughter and her friends joining next year, we may have more young women on the team then young men. ![]() |
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#35
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Re: Attracting Females to STEM/FIRST
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If a team is 90% boys and 10% girls, whatever. If that's the opposite, whatever. If it's equal, whatever. A good program is a good program regardless of how many males or females it has involved. A program that focuses on equality is prone to produce those 'token minorities', and that's even worse since it leads to further enforcement of stereotypes and demeaning of individuals. A segregated approach to recruiting only leads to segregation, in my experience. |
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#36
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Re: Attracting Females to STEM/FIRST
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The workshop can take anywhere from 25 to 45 minutes. It really depends on how much you want to talk and how much help the workshop leader has in the room to help the students troubleshoot the batteries/pager motors. For 170 students (35 students per class with 3-4 adults to help), you will need to order parts for 200 kits. By shopping around on the internet for the parts, the cost should be about $200. The 10-15% parts overage is needed because not all the pager motors/batteries will work or the students will accidentally 'disable' their pager motor by various methods of handling it. The toothbrush handles will need to be cut off in advance. We placed each KOPs in snack-sized ziplock bags. We take a roll of paper with us to put on the tables to protect them from the hot glue (about 8 to 10 hot glue guns), a couple power strips are a must, and set-up time to let the glue get hot before the first class. We also do the safety briefing that the glue is hot and the students have to be careful not to burn themselves with it. Also, make sure to have a package of glue sticks. |
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#37
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Re: Attracting Females to STEM/FIRST
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#38
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Re: Attracting Females to STEM/FIRST
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Acknowledging that current behavior by boys on these teams can be driving away girls may be uncomfortable for some, and teen age boys don't like to be told that they should reconsider how they behave and interact. But that's what is as the core of changing the FRC culture. Last edited by Citrus Dad : 21-05-2014 at 13:56. Reason: added conclusion |
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#39
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Re: Attracting Females to STEM/FIRST
Probably one method that's taken for granted is telling girls that STEM activities isn't just for boys. Most of the time, they have doubt and would probably feel like there aren't any other girls in the team. Give an example of a girl in the team who has made massive contributions. It does work.
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#40
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Re: Attracting Females to STEM/FIRST
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My impression is that they are probably the MOST excited about FIRST, but are overwhelmed by the boys that are REALLY into building. I don't know the dynamics of the team very well, but there's certainly a subconcious gender conflict happening that keeps things separated. |
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#41
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Re: Attracting Females to STEM/FIRST
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Perhaps the better idea to compare is how rigid the boundaries for the toys are. It seems like boys' toys (building blocks, car tracks) work a certain way, but girls' toys (dolls, tea sets) require going beyond the limitations or perhaps maybe it's the girls that go beyond the limitations rather than the toy "requiring it". Well...one thing's for sure, there are differences in the toy sets, and I wonder if that alters things. Playing with dolls vs. cars, I can definitely see how that would change you. Dolls are more of a social toy vs. cars are more of a "engineering" (not the right word) toy. Hmm, perhaps that's the difference I'm trying to allude to, and this is something CitrusDad mentioned about girls being more socially aware than boys. |
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#42
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Re: Attracting Females to STEM/FIRST
I've hesitated to post here because I'm pretty sure I'm an edge case, or at least, not representative of any sort of majority of girls.
I wish my experience with STEM as a young girl were typical. When I was seven, I asked my dad to teach me how to talk to computers- and he tried. I wanted to be a fairy princess, then found out that engineering and science were essentially magic. I had a big sister in STEM. I had a close friend (also female) who I moved ahead in math with. And I was always, always encouraged. Quote:
(If you're curious, for 2014-15: captain- female; co-captain- female. Subteam leads: mechanical design- female, machining/fabrication- female, electrical- male, robot programming- female, app (scouting) programming- male, business/media- male. I'll pull out the gender ratios by subteams from 13-14 later.) We're going into our third year with a female captain. The first year with a female captain was about the same time we reached that critical mass. I don't know which one caused the other, but I'm happy about both. Quote:
I really wish I had noticed the similarities earlier. As soon as I did, I gained a level of confidence that helped me. It would be a good idea to reach out to the yarn/fiber/fabric communities. There are a lot of good potential students there, many of them female. Quote:
My first year I managed to pretend my way out of being shy, and I stayed, but I've never been quite as assertive as I needed to be. As the team captain in 2013-14, even with all the support I needed, this was a bit of a problem. I don't know if that personality quirk is because I'm a girl, but... If I hadn't been a girl, would I have learned to always be accommodating and be a good hostess? Learned to walk a half step behind anyone who I thought of as in a position of authority, usually including anyone older or taller than me? To wait for the invitation, then for a fairy to fix my problems? To not draw attention to myself to avoid being labelled a girl? Some of those would have happened no matter what gender I was or am. Others I'm not so sure about. The culture that little girls (including me) grow up in often doesn't help us in historically male fields. Quote:
One last thought. If you offer me an opportunity because I'm a woman, I'll still take it. I'm going to take every opportunity that comes my way, because I know I'll need to take advantage of all of them in order to get where I want to go. If I find out that it's because of my gender... well, I'll still take it, but don't expect me to be happy about it. |
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#43
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Re: Attracting Females to STEM/FIRST
We get that question a lot actually. There is a fairly even distribution. We do have more girls in non-build positions, however, most of our team is in a non-build position. Our team tends to focus on other things. As far as drive team, we have had a girl on drive team the past three consecutive years, and have had them on it in years before that too. At offseason events we try to get completely female drive teams out there.
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