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#16
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Re: Sign this petition to allow girls in robotics! (at Timmins Public library)!
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#17
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Re: Sign this petition to allow girls in robotics! (at Timmins Public library)!
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#18
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Re: Sign this petition to allow girls in robotics! (at Timmins Public library)!
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And, your assertion about correctness rests on what compromise among the various things a public intuition might try to accomplish? Absolutes are few and far between in these conversations. There is no such thing as "fairness" in an absolute sense, outside the realm of abstract mathematics. |
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#19
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Re: Sign this petition to allow girls in robotics! (at Timmins Public library)!
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Nowhere in the change.org petition do they mention the library's finances. I was pointing out that throwing money at the library wouldn't solve the root problem raised specifically by this girl and her mother on the petition. I guess it would depend on whether or not the boy's parent made a change.org petition and it went viral. |
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#20
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Re: Sign this petition to allow girls in robotics! (at Timmins Public library)!
Not that I would encourage this, but I'm pretty sure if the parents were to sue the library they would win easily. Assuming this is a public library, this is a clear case of gender discrimination by a government entity. A good lawyer would have a field day with a case like this.
Just saying. |
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#21
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Re: Sign this petition to allow girls in robotics! (at Timmins Public library)!
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In addition to taking the Internet at face value being a low-payoff bet; nowhere in my post did I mention the library's finances either. Please read again all of what I wrote. I didn't focus on finances. I raised the notion that telling someone they are wrong isn't the only way to react to an incompletely described situation like this; and I focused on ensuring interested young women's needs would be met. Last edited by gblake : 02-07-2015 at 14:40. |
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#22
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Re: Sign this petition to allow girls in robotics! (at Timmins Public library)!
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The key here, I think, is that the library isn't denying the girl the chance to visit, check out or read books, or join other groups. They just said no to joining this particular group. That doesn't make it discrimination. All that said, this does appear, on the surface, as a case of fulfilling gender stereotypes, which is, unfortunately, something our society seems really good at doing all the time. We constantly push our stereotypical images, guiding different groups down different paths, which is something that we really should change, and something it would be great to see public places like the library try to tackle. This is an opportunity to educate the employees of that library, provide them with a shining example of non-stereotypical gender roles, and get them on our side. Not an opportunity to contemplate a lawsuit that really wouldn't have any winner. |
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#23
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Re: Sign this petition to allow girls in robotics! (at Timmins Public library)!
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I know a little about one large urban school system that use grant money to run a multi-million dollar STEM experiment that attempted to reduce students' post-summer-break test score declines. I believe the program was a glowing success. That program enrolled students from "Title 1" schools (low-income communities). That was something of a broad brush approach to picking participants; but I'm *guessing* that it was a reasonable compromise to use in a large city in order to get usable result measurements without adding the expense and logistics of identifying and admitting candidate students one-by-one. However, if you were the most-at-risk student in the least-affluent, non-Title-1 school district in that city, you might have wanted to start a virtual petition. Was the program I described a good one, or an evil one? It didn't give every student a chance to participate.. It discriminated based on age, based on the student's neighbors' wealth, based on the total school system's boundaries, based on ... Blake PS: [TOTALLY TONGUE-IN-CHEEK]Extrapolating from the tiny bit of hopefully-accurate information we have about the program's reason for existing, the obvious way to change the program's goals in the future would be for the young women in the town to agree to purposefully do poorly on their back-to-school exams. If they do that, they will need summer programs more than the boys do.[/TOTALLY TONGUE-IN-CHEEK] Last edited by gblake : 02-07-2015 at 15:35. |
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#24
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Re: Sign this petition to allow girls in robotics! (at Timmins Public library)!
Likewise signed
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#25
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Re: Sign this petition to allow girls in robotics! (at Timmins Public library)!
Is it the programming that prevents said erosion or that it is for boys only?
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#26
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Re: Sign this petition to allow girls in robotics! (at Timmins Public library)!
That's messed up
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#27
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Re: Sign this petition to allow girls in robotics! (at Timmins Public library)!
I have to agree that jumping on the "discrimination" bandwagon this early is a tad bit unreasonable considering how little we actually know about this program, however, the reasoning (that the petition claims was given, not a direct statement by the library available to us) is some that I have never seen before.
I'm not particularly invested in this issue, so I'm not quite willing to go looking, but has anyone found any kind of evidence supporting this kind of argument? In addition, depending on how they are gathering their data, it seems like allowing girls into the program would be a non issue, as they could simply separate the girls and boys data afterwards. Just seems a bit strange is all. |
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#28
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Re: Sign this petition to allow girls in robotics! (at Timmins Public library)!
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Don't get me wrong, I'm not saying this should go to court; I was merely making the observation that if the family wanted to pursue legal action they would probably have a good chance of winning based on examples I've seen of other cases somewhat similar to this. I also think that the library is being stupid for opening themselves up to the potential legal issues (and the costs associated with fighting it) that such litigation would impose, and that the very simple solution is to either hold two classes or not block girls from joining it if they're interested. |
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#29
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Re: Sign this petition to allow girls in robotics! (at Timmins Public library)!
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*To address myself and Jon Stratis, the petition explains "She [Assistant Library Director Elaine De Bonis] said I [the girl in question] could be added to a waiting list and if enough girls showed interest they could possibly look into offering it to girls in the future." I have no reason to disbelieve this and no evidence to the contrary, but at this point it's hearsay. |
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#30
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Re: Sign this petition to allow girls in robotics! (at Timmins Public library)!
In other news, just hit this in my research:
https://ca.news.yahoo.com/blogs/dail...184721564.html Timmins Public Library reverses decision on boys-only robotics event after girl's petition |
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