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#151
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Re: Discussion on All-Girl events
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#152
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The more important thing to notice is that everyone is different in their own special way. Males and females both bring different skills to the table to help the team succeed. Even two people of the same gender have different strengths. For example, one male may be a fabulous machinist while another may be great at writing grants. It is the combination of all of these different people, male and female, who make a great team.
IMHO, the reason for All-girls events is that typically, females are better at certain roles on the team. These roles can sometimes mean that they don't get to participate on the drive team or pit crew at regular season competitions because they are busy contributing to the team by doing what they do best, whatever that may be. Also, it is always interesting to watch an all girls event because of these differences. Females do generally attack a problem a bit differently than males (not saying that either way is better) so some strategy is different. I love to compete at all girls events because it gives me the chance to be on the drive team. During the season, my skills are better used talking to judges and leading the team as team president. That doesn't leave a lot of time for drive team. I really enjoyed IndyRAGE last year and I hope that I get to attend again this year. |
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#153
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Re: Discussion on All-Girl events
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Aren't there boys -- maybe those whose strengths involve writing grants -- who would also love a chance to be on the drive team who never had the opportunity? I just think that a "try out new role" type of event would achieve the same goal, but be far less exclusive. |
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#154
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Re: Discussion on All-Girl events
+1
Please can we just end this thread. I feel like we've squeezed all the productivity we possibly can out of it already. |
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#155
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Re: Discussion on All-Girl events
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#156
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Re: Discussion on All-Girl events
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#157
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Re: Discussion on All-Girl events
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2680714/ supports that "the sexual dimorphism in the structure of the parietal lobe is a neurobiological substrate for the sex difference in performance on the Mental Rotations Test." In other words, neurobiological differences in the brain are likely causing the performance discrepancies. Quote:
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#158
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Re: Discussion on All-Girl events
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Also, if there was any question I am in no way related to this "anfrcguy" nor do I endorse or support what he is saying. Last edited by frcguy : 03-08-2016 at 12:25. |
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#159
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Re: Discussion on All-Girl events
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An oversimplified example: Say a boy and a girl go to the same preschool, which assigns the boys blocks to play with and the girls doll houses. These kind of external factors impact which parts of the brains are exercised during play and thus what part would foster growth. We can't isolate the variables enough to say what portion of the development is caused by something inherent to the human's sex and what portion is caused by differing life experiences based on being treated as a member of that sex's associated gender. Even so, this point is kind of tangential - you can't use generalized trends to justify treating specific people differently. There are many women with better spatial reasoning with many men, but if sexist attitudes in society work from the generalization that women are weaker in that area than men, those women may not even get the chance to try and exercise the skills they have due to this perception. Social factors are everywhere. Events like all-girls events just try to eliminate those social factors for one day and let young women try whatever they want to try on a robotics team. For one day. |
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#160
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Re: Discussion on All-Girl events
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Are there boys who would benefit from a push to try new things too? Yes. I'm not saying that those situations don't exist. But boys -by and large- are not actively discouraged from STEM the way girls are, and girls events are about addressing big, system wide problems. |
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#161
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Re: Discussion on All-Girl events
Since when are anonymous trolling accounts allowed? Is there some rule change we haven't been made aware of?
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#162
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Re: Discussion on All-Girl events
I wanted to add one last insight - maybe something that could help.
I myself am part of an all-boys team (we're from an all-boys school), and that forces our students to develop interests in all parts of the team. We have both a large build/programming department, as well as large, well-developed business/outreach departments. Though I have little experience with all-girls teams, I would assume the same would hold true. I think IndyRAGE is basically just a taste of what all-girls teams do all the time - have girls involved in all parts of the team. In this sense, I think it is a very positive experience to have, if only for 1 event, to empower girls to take charge in parts of the team where they are historically less involved (largely due to social pressures). |
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#163
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Reading the thread helps you answer questions you may have. |
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#164
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Re: Discussion on All-Girl events
While I've been reading this thread since it started, I've been avoiding posting for a while because I don't want to simply rehash the same old arguments. Plus I've been busy (perhaps ironically) teaching at the Women's Technology Program, a summer camp introducing rising high school senior women to EECS and having lots of conversations with my colleagues on this subject. But I've been talking with a friend who reminded me that there seems to be a trend that females are more likely to allow themselves to be marginalized in conversations, are more likely to use qualifying language to express uncertainty, and are more likely to keep quiet/doubt that they can contribute to the conversation, so I'm attempting to refute that
I found Pauline's post extremely insightful, and I want to expand on it.Quote:
But there's a frightening lack of representation of women in the most technical pursuits, and I think it's difficult to realize just how bad it is until you walk into a room and realize how alone you are. I was often the only girl at builds. I sat in on a Turing Computer Science Honors class at UT Austin: my presence brought the number of women in that room up to 20% (from 7/39 to 8/40). HackMIT runs a puzzle of programming challenges with automatic admission to the hackathon as the prize: out of the first 250 to attempt the puzzle, only 8% were female. I have no doubt that the number of women pursuing computer science outside of Turing is more balanced, as is the actual number of women attending HackMIT, but it's almost uniformly men who have more exposure to CS from a younger age, allowing them to dominate the higher levels of the field, at least at first, which only gives them more and more legs up: they get to take the honors classes, participate in hackathons, practice their skills, have access to fantastic resources... Most of the male programmers I know have been programming since they could type. Most of the female programmers I know learned their first year of college (or later). A pair of MIT 2016s published a fantastic Report on the Status of Undergraduate Women at MIT http://news.mit.edu/2016/report-on-s...en-at-mit-0225 which essentially says that women come in with less experience and confidence in their abilities, but by the end of their time at MIT women had caught up or surpassed men in several metrics of success. FRC teams have the same ability to level the playing field, as long as we're careful not to accidentally steer girls away from technical parts (although it's also critical that no one be forced into something they don't enjoy). Just because she's happy doing marketing/outreach doesn't mean she wouldn't also be happy CADing or soldering if you give her a proper chance. When I was in high school, I did some of mechanical/electrical stuff, and started out doing drive team, but I did a ton of outreach and paperwork because no one else wanted to do it. And as a result, by the end of the season I had been pushed off drive team. Which was fine because the guys really wanted to do it, and it made them happy, and they probably did a better job than I could have, and anyway outreach stuff is fun and important. For similar reasons, I never learned how to solder in high school: by the time it came up we were in the middle of build, and from a utilitarian standpoint, it made them happier to solder than it would have made me, and anyway, what if I messed up? My friends and I have speculated about girls being conditioned to be polite and considerate and please others and so on, but it's not speculation that these definitely aren't isolated incidents, despite the best efforts of my mentors. And like most of the women in STEM I know, I find myself moving more and more towards more managerial/logistic extracurriculars, which I almost feel guilty about, as if I'm letting down future generations of women, but it's what I truly enjoy more. But I think that's because I know I'm good at it, because it was easy to get involved in those sorts of activities, whereas the activation energy required to start technical projects was much higher. I wonder if my choices would have been different if the shop where the technical teams work wasn't a pretty long walk in the dark from my dorm. I welcome anything that attempts to negate the many factors nudging girls away from technical fields. |
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#165
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Re: Discussion on All-Girl events
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If the moderators are not going to enforce the rules of anonymous (second) accounts, I am going to ask the community to stop engaging in discussions with trolls. Let them say whatever they want. If nobody responds to them, they will go away. I even put some of them on ignore list so I don't have to see their posts. Last edited by Ed Law : 03-08-2016 at 22:44. Reason: to clarify based on what Eric said |
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