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US Wins Math Olympiad For First Time In 21 Years

An anonymous reader writes: The U.S. won the International Mathematical Olympiad for the first time in 21 years. Gender diversity is brought up in this NPR article because the eight team members on the U.S. team were all male, but they made a point to mention that of the top 12 people participating in the U.S. Math Olympiad, 2 are female, which is better than last year when there were no females in the top 12. "I will say that it's not really a super-great spectator sport, in the sense that if you are watching them, it will look like they are thinking," Po-Shen Loh, a professor at Carnegie Mellon University and head coach for Team USA says. "Although I will assure you that inside their heads, if you could spectate, that would be quite a sport."

10 of 280 comments (clear)

  1. Why is Slashdot so focused on counting penises? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why has Slashdot been so focused on counting genitalia lately? Every day there's some story about how there are too many penises, or not enough vaginas, involved with some industry or activity. I mean, earlier today we had a shitty submission about the penis and vagina accountants not liking the numbers they're working with, which I thought would mean no more penis and vagina counting submissions for the rest of the day. But nope! I was wrong! Now we have this submission, which although it mentions mathematics briefly, is far more focused on counting penises and vaginas.

    1. Re:Why is Slashdot so focused on counting penises? by Raseri · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's a legitimate question to ask.

      No, it really isn't, and unless you can prove that the team organizers are checking competitors' pants, or that the evil Patriarchy Boogeyman is stopping women from competing, you just come off like a shrill lunatic with a massive chip on her shoulder.

      That suggests that selection for the teams is either not based purely on merit, or there is some issue preventing more girls studying mathematics to the highest levels.

      Or that, overall, women just aren't as good as men at math. It's a legitimate possibility; that you simply don't like it or feel threatened by it is irrelevant.

      --
      Writhe your naked ass to the mindless groove.
  2. So not by the color of their skin by Crashmarik · · Score: 3, Insightful

    But by the content of their character ?

    Really I am sure the diversity police would have been in heaven, if the team had quotas and lost. It's for the greater good after all.

  3. And as usual, Slashdot commenters miss the point by wickerprints · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "So not by the color of their skin."
    "Why is Slashdot so focused on counting penises?"
    "Leftie vs. Rightie pitching."
    "Diversity can go only so far. There are no women playing in the NFL and no men in the LPGA."

    *DOUBLE FACEPALM*

    The point, as so many have so persistently failed to grasp, is not simply that there are no female competitors on the US team. It's not simply that the top mathematics students overwhelmingly tend to be male. These are all true, but the point is not that this happens because males are intrinsically better at math. The point is that there is NO EVIDENCE to suggest that the brains of females are any less capable of developing mathematical proficiency and talent in this age group (or any age group, for that matter). Pointing to the existing disparity as evidence is a fallacy: once, not too long ago, there were no black baseball players.

    Instead, the point is that there exists a systematic, cultural, and longstanding bias against encouraging and fostering scientific and mathematical proficiency in female students, and the purpose of bringing this up in the context of the IMO is to again remind Western countries such as the US, that this imbalance exists not because women just "happen" to be worse at math, but because women are DISCOURAGED from doing math and continue to be discouraged. And to be absolutely clear about this:

    1. That does not necessarily mean that men are treated preferentially (in the sense of being given an easier time in STEM fields), but rather that women who attempt to persist in STEM paths tend to face a higher likelihood of varying degrees of sexism and sex discrimination from both peers and instructors that would not happen if they were male. Sometimes it is subtle, sometimes it is overt, but always, it is treatment that would not have happened if they were male.

    2. This cultural attitude against women expressing interest in mathematics and science is not exclusive to men. In fact, it is very often women oppressing other women through peer pressure--in particular, the desire to conform to standards of behavior and personal interests that are more aligned with traditionally "feminine" pursuits. If you are a female teenager interested in math who had the remarkable fortune of not having had your parents ever ask you "why would you want to be a math major? Wouldn't that be too hard," or teachers who didn't think that "girls just don't seem to have the persistence and capability to do the kind of abstract thinking required for mathematics," you would no doubt find that your fellow female friends would almost invariably NOT want to be mathematicians or scientists. And that is also a form of bias that perpetuates the lack of females in mathematics.

    The way a lot of guys react to gender inequality really fails to understand the basic problem. When someone calls out institutionalized sexism, that is not an indictment of individual male behavior. It is an attempt to call to attention a structural problem that is being perpetuated by continued obstinacy on the part of people (both male and female) who don't want to take the time to think about what it might be like to be in someone else's shoes for a change.

  4. Re: Why is Slashdot so focused on counting penises by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    it's most websites these days... they've been hijacked by a radical feminist SJW agenda and everything - EVERYTHING - must be, one way or another, about women.

    i'm all for equality. who in their right mind is NOT? but if people are selected based on merit and women don't make it in, what is the story?

    nobody is seeking to exclude women by policy. so if they don't cut it or if enough of them simply aren't interested, whose problem is that?

    i know that this unpleasant movement won't last... it can't... it's too hypocritical and vitriolic. but man, the faster this brand of feminism ceases to be in public discourse, the better all of humanity will be.

  5. Re:One thing I have noticed by Karmashock · · Score: 5, Insightful

    entry level evolutionary psychology answers that question.

    Women are psychologically uncomfortable with competing with men.

    Argue with a women about something that your mutual power or status in the group. Women statistically shut off in these contests. Where as men statistically don't back down even if they have a good chance of getting pasted.

    This goes back to our evolutionary roots in that men genetically DIE if they do not obtain status sufficient to obtain breeding rights where as women really just have to play it safe and they pass on their genes.

    This encourages men to compete because if they do not compete they lose status, do not get breeding rights, and genetically die. And women both don't need to bother with that, their genetic priorities have nothing to do with their status or contests with males, and challenging males historically was dangerous because they could kill you if you threatened them with genetic death.

    Thus in any competitive environment involving males, women do not feel comfortable or even motivated.

    The idea from current education theory which has actually contributed to women doing better in a lot of subjects is to remote the competitive environment from subjects. Make things cooperative, turn the emotional intensity down a bit, and try to mellow things out.

    This works really well for getting girls to feel comfortable.

    The problem if you care is that in male evolutionary psychology, things that are not competed for are not worth anything. The male mind as programmed at a very deep level that it has to obtain status. If status is not being offered in something then it is probably pointless. If not only does it not offer status but it is hard and consumes a lot of time/energy/resources... then from an evolutionary perspective the male mind is programmed to see the entire thing as a threat to his genetic survival. He MUST obtain status and wasting a lot of his time doing something that doesn't get him what he needs means he'll have less time later to focus on that.

    Thus you can't really educate girls and boys in the same school without shutting one of the sexes off... statistically.

    If you have competition then the girls will shut off. If you don't then the boys will shut off.

    This is basic and very very well understood and supported science at this point.

    The problem is that its all political because there is this notion... which comes out of marxist theory... that people can be changed by their environments. I don't mean that in the way that you educate someone but I mean TOTALLY changed. As in your human nature can be entirely overridden and in fact the argument from a lot of people is that ALL human nature is a social construct.

    So... gender itself is a social construct. A core belief of modern feminism is that there is NO difference between men and women mentally and psychologically. It is entirely a product of cultural and social conditioning. The theory from these people is that if you treat a girl like a boy you can make her identical to the boy mentally and psychologically. Indifferent to all the science that contradicts that.

    Boys and girls are neurologically different. The brain structure can be told apart by neurologists rather easily. And psychologically boys and girls aver VERY different beasts.

    The problem is that in many cases "science" is not politically correct. The left likes to think it is the party of science and reason. It is only that when science and reason either is convenient for the ideology or does not contradict it. But whenever it does... as science does in this case... they're as likely to be pigheaded on the subject as any bible thumping creationist.

    And sadly while we recognize creationists for being what they are and largely exclude them from influencing the education system. We do not exclude marxist ideologues from influencing our education system.

    Here some cute pink cheeked marxist dupe is going to contradict me. I welcome it. Come at me.

    --
    I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
  6. Re:And as usual, Slashdot commenters miss the poin by alvinrod · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I was recently having a discussion about someone related to IQ tests (there was an interesting poll (who knew) on Slashdot a while ago) and was discussing Raven's Matrices as an example of a test that I thought was unbiased as it was free of any cultural context and had been reduced to abstraction, but a friend shared a study (PDF link)with me that pointed out that the test did have a built-in gender bias due to reliance on spacial analysis, which men do perform better at.

    Given that spacial rotations, manipulation, etc. are an important part of many mathematical fields, it doesn't surprise me that men tend to perform better on average. Also, this does not say that all men are better at math or that women cannot be brilliant mathematicians, merely that if you look at the number of elite mathematicians, that more of them will be male because they are biologically predisposed to be stronger at some of the aspects that make an individual better at math.

    Also, you should account for a person's own internalization of their abilities and how it affects their behavior. If women tend not to be as good at math from an early age, many of them will take a disinterested approach to it. This is hardly unique to women as children and people of all ages and genders exhibit this behavior. Because there are areas where women tend to perform better than men (along with any other brain wiring differences that produce different effects in people) they may be more drawn to other areas of study and focus there time there.

    The problem is that there is evidence to suggest that men and women are different, but there are some who will not accept that argument. I don't know whether that is because the fall prey to some of the same illogical reason that you point to above and assume that it means women can't do something or if it's just a simple matter of people treating their belief as an article of faith that must be true and therefor anything to the contrary must be false.

    While there's certainly no lack of sexism in the world, it's a lot harder to accept that there's some kind of pervasive institutional problem when you have no reason to suspect that you should see roughly equal number of men and women among the ranks of the top mathematicians. Also, given that women earn ~45% of B.S. degree's in mathematics in the U.S. it makes the claims of institutional sexism (at least in this area) even harder to believe. Interestingly enough, women early ~70% of the B.S. degrees in English and foreign languages. Perhaps that is related to the scientific evidence that shows that females perform better than males in terms of verbal abilities.

    I don't think you'll find many people who are against providing equal opportunity (or as much as we reasonably can) to everyone, but you can't get there with bad arguments. You end up fighting a problem that doesn't exist or attempting to use a solution that isn't going to work. I think that people are just tired of dealing with other people who don't care to look at the science or will reject it because it doesn't mesh with their existing views. It's a bit like trying to argue with someone who believes in young-earth creationism.

  7. Re:And as usual, Slashdot commenters miss the poin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    And dicks control all the /. mod points.

  8. Re:And as usual, Slashdot commenters miss the poin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Fuck off fascist. We're wise to your bullshit now. You don't give a fuck about women or their welfare. We know this is a political power play and we know the devastation your kind will wreak on our professions and hobbies if we let you in the door.

    This story has been politicized. What should have been a celebration of the United States' winning victory in the Olympiad, and the evidence of year of math outreach paying off, has instead been turned into yet another attempt to kick mud into the faces of math nerds across the country for a crime they never committed. The math community has been pushing math outreach and education for women for YEARS!! DECADES NOW.

    but because women are DISCOURAGED from doing math and continue to be discouraged

    You are a liar and a closet cultural reactionary. Girls are encouraged to take an interest in and study math and those efforts were fucking paying off long before you and your SJW Stormtroopers decided to launch your blitzkreig on us.

    The way a lot of guys react to gender inequality really fails to understand the basic problem.

    You internet Nazis have turned women in tech into a third rail topic!!. Years of progress are being undone by your hysteria, stereotyping, shaming tactics, and culture war baiting. You are a cancer on STEM. We cannot even celebrate the MATHEMATICS OLYMPIAD!! without you people smearing your gender wars and identity politics all over a day for nerds, boys and girls both, who just want to geek out and be left alone.

    This story summary is beyond disgusting. Beyond offensive. Nothing is sacred on Slashdot anymore. Everything we have, everything we built to be above the rotten stereotypes of mainstream society is being sucked down into septic culture wars by these mendacious hipster fakes!! Math is for everyone. It's above this petty politicization. Slashdot should be above this. But you bastards shitting it all up. Damn you! Damn you all to Hell!!!

  9. Re:One thing I have noticed by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1, Insightful

    This goes back to our evolutionary roots in that men genetically DIE if they do not obtain status sufficient to obtain breeding rights where as women really just have to play it safe and they pass on their genes.

    Oh dear, here comes the evopshcy.

    It's intellectually dishonest to take behaviour models from one of our closest relative while not taking them also from our other closest relative (bonobos). As I'm sure you're aware the sexual behaviour of bonobos and chimps is very, very different. And if anything we're more similar to bonobos than chimps in this regard as of the three, chimps lack the oxycotin receptors which make sexual bonding work in the other two.

    But we're not bonobos either.

    Trying to apply simplistic models of sexual behaviour based on other species is an invalid way of reasoning and so will lead you to all sorts of invalid conclusions.

    Here some cute pink cheeked marxist dupe is going to contradict me. I welcome it. Come at me.

    Attacking the messenger as a means to dismiss the argument is literally the definiton of ad homenim. As such your post is bracketed at the top and bottom with logical fallacies. Great way to start and end, at least it gives a good idea of what one might find in the middle.

    --
    SJW n. One who posts facts.