Study of 1.6 Million Grades Shows Little Gender Difference in Math and Science at School (theconversation.com)
A study of school grades of more than 1.6 million students shows that girls and boys perform similarly in science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) subjects. From a report: The research, published today in Nature Communications, also shows that girls do better than boys in non-STEM subjects. Our results provide evidence that large gaps in the representation of women in STEM careers later in life are not due to differences in academic performance. One explanation for gender imbalance in STEM is the "variability hypothesis." This is the idea that gender gaps are much larger at the tails of the distribution -- among the highest and lowest performers -- than in the middle.
Boys and girls have both the same abilities. However boys tend to be more inclined to pursue studies in science.
Slashdot, fix the reply notifications... You won't get away with it...
There isn't a big financial incentive to go into STEM jobs if you are a college-educated professional. The pay is good, but there is a limit to your professional growth and you have to actually do work and produce results. In reality, sales and marketing at tech companies make as much or more as STEM people. So unless you really enjoy STEM, it is better off avoiding it as a career. I think many women have figured this out.
Instead of doing this study while knowing about the "variability hypothesis" maybe try to disprove earlier hypotheses. But thats probably not gonna happen since its not the desired outcome.
>> also shows that girls do better than boys in non-STEM subjects.
So, we need to have a massive influx of cash, capital, action to ensure that boys catch up to girls in non-STEM subjects. Boys go to and graduate from college less frequently than girls. There needs to be massive encouragement and support for boys to attend college. Something must be done. It is unconscionable that boys are being left behind like this. There seems to be a massive, systematic, institutional prejudice against boys that is causing them to fail. Something must be done. Boys are 50% of the population, but, they are not 50% of College graduates. Something must be done. There should be scholarships and camps and meetings and web-sites and discussion forums and bridge groups. This is absolutely unfair and shows a great prejudice and discrimination against boys and maleness.
Looks like as women take over in STEM as well, we'll need to have a massive culling of males.
Maybe something like those grinders that they throw male chicks into.
The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
But you know that it won't happen. Males are just props for feels or pawns these days.
Here comes a furious barrage of rationalization so that we don't have to acknowledge any possibility whatsoever of bias in STEM hiring. 3, 2, 1...
It's not about gender, it's about personal choice. The only ones claiming women are worse at anything are just sexist. The ones claiming that fewer women CHOOSE stem careers are more accurate. And I say this with a female tech working on the PC to my right.
There is. It's well known that the classroom environment of "sit still and shut up" absolutely favors girls. Boys magically do better when allowed to run around more.
Good luck getting any support for this.
Considering the authors, the funding source and even that they get funding to study gender issues, smells of a biased result.
Boys and girls have both the same abilities. However, boys tend to be more inclined to pursue studies in science.
When I taught math or science, the girls were always among the top of the class.
The main reason was that they cared about their grades.
However, they never seemed to enjoy geeking out or talking about things that weren't going to be on the test.
I'm not saying it's a bad thing. Girls would invest in coming to class, taking notes, coming to study and tutoring sessions and really asking for help when they needed it.
Guys weren't as social. Some guys would have problems and not ask for help and do horribly in the end.
Grades are very artificial. They can be gamed since the teacher is giving the grade (it's not a third party assessment). You can get As and not learn much but also get a D and learn a lot.
What really should be looked at is expertise and not grades.
Of course, with every generalization I've made, I remember plenty of exceptions.
Funny the authors did not post their first names in the paper. At least one is a women from looking at citations. Could they be hiding some bias?
Well, yes, something should be done. After all we care about helping every child to fulfil their potential, right?
And yes, it is massive, systemic and institutional. Breaking down the barriers that boys face is the way to solve it.
Some of it is even discrimination. I've heard of boys being told that cooking and even book clubs are not for them, due to toxic ideas of what masculinity is and apparently the teacher wanting the club to be girls only.
Remarkably insightful post.
const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
I bet she knew how to use apostrophes?
I realize that this was intended as sarcasm, but in my kids schools there was a Communication Arts magnet program. They bent over backwards to get enough boys in that program to get somewhat equal numbers of boys and girls. So at least in some areas, there is an attempt to achieve balance by encouraging and supporting boys.
Not going to happen because boys are neither women nor necessarily minorities, both of which are traditionally thought to be "hit hardest" when it comes to adversity.
If girls are better at A than boys, but only as good as boys at B, it stands to reason that girls will favor A over B. That's exactly what is happening. Girls go into subjects in which they excel. It frustrates me that no one ever looks at why aren't more men teachers, nurses, social workers, etc. Part of the problem is that not enough women are going into STEM as "we" would like, but the flipside is that not enough men are going into non-STEM. Why don't we try and get more men into non-STEM careers and see what happens?
If it showed boys consistently outperformed girls on math and science, it wouldn’t be allowed to be published. For the same reason, the data can never be refuted.
Kinda sad this got modded as "Funny" ( as of right now anyway ), it's more +5 Sad because you know it won't happen. Men and boys are expendable, they exist to support and provide for women...and that's precisely how society views them.
Welcome to the "patriarchy".
As an aside, I'm conflicted on encouraging more people to go to college. Funding is already a shitshow ( student loans being guaranteed, colleges having blank checks ), and the indoctrination environment on college campuses aren't healthy for people to be subjected to. That said, I would absolutely love to see programs aimed at boys for the trades ( construction, plumbing, electrical, machinists, ect... ).
Mod me down with all of your hatred and your journey towards the dark side will be complete!
I'm looking forward to the new Google counterpart to their "Ovaries in Coding" initiative:
Training & Educational Synergies Toward Individuals Creating Leading Experiences, ie Google TESTICLE.
-Styopa
Some of the better scientists I've worked with in pharmaceutical chemistry and manufacturing were women. There were also great men as well. We worked in an encouraging environment that gave opportunities to present our data and to try out new hypothesizes without fear of being belittled for the experiments failing. Removing the competition aspect of the job (i.e. I've got to be better than s/he to get ahead) and focusing on collaboration and brainstorming with your fellow scientists allowed both genders to do great work.
Or maybe you're just an insecure, bitter toad who can't accept that women might be more capable and easier to work with than you.
From the summary: "One explanation for gender imbalance in STEM is the "variability hypothesis." This is the idea that gender gaps are much larger at the tails of the distribution -- among the highest and lowest performers -- than in the middle."
I have a hard time believing that out of 1.6M students the ends of the bell curve vary so extremely from those in the middle. Maybe there are other systematic issues.... just maybe? Not that I think we're going to fix systematic issues overnight, but we don't do ourselves any favors by avoiding them either.
But needing to run around in class is a symptom of a disorder. Those boys need meds!
And then everyone stood up and clapped, right? This is even more ridiculous than the story of the Navy Seal Iraq war veteran who punched the science professor trying to disprove God.
Here are the SAT results for 2017.
https://reports.collegeboard.org/sat-suite-program-results/detailed-2017-reports
Males win with 20 points over in total and all of it comes from big lead in Mathematical Reasoning section.
Females have negligible lead (of 2pt) in ERW (Evidence based reading and writing) but lose everything on math skills.
All of that is on average and proves nothing.
Guys who suck at math maybe don't do SATs and don't attempt collage and go learn a trade and live fine without huge debts.
If girls are better at non-STEM subjects, and equals at STEM subjects, shouldn't the STEM fields skew towards boys?
An average girl has less competition in a non-STEM field (due to boys under-performing), but more competition in a STEM field (do to boys and girls performing equally). So some girls will choose non-STEM over STEM.
While the average boy is less likely to be able to compete in a non-STEM field (due to boys doing worse in non-STEM subjects). So by elimination, that means more boys will go into STEM fields.
Or am I missing something?
Grades are ... highly elastic things.
I have kids in grade school right now. Sometimes they get to redo assignments if they did badly on them, sometimes they even get to redo tests. Sometimes homework counts for a lot, sometimes a little. Sometimes extra credit is possible, sometimes it isn't. Some teachers offer more extra help, some less.
There's a lot of room for ... what shall we call it, fudge factor? And I'm pretty sure I know what direction the pressure would be in this scenario.
So first things first; we may not "know" what we think we know from this study at all.
I have a hard time believing that out of 1.6M students the ends of the bell curve vary so extremely from those in the middle.
Why?
Statistics are clearly showing that minorities and women are greatly over represented in college intakes in comparison to their grades.
Schools are picking lower scoring individuals to satisfy some sort of equality metric; those people consistently fail and drop out resulting in a much more natural end result (diversity among those graduating college once again falls in line with the scoring results).
So efforts to get some sort of outcome-driven equality, fail all the time. Nordic communities likewise found that out, they are amongst the highest scoring in actual equality but classic gender and race patterns are emerging stronger than elsewhere.
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You may have a hard time believing it, but it's generally believed to be true.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
isn't to improve their lives, it's to increase the supply of STEM graduates and decrease their pay. It's not nothing to do with Gender inequality. There's no shortage of non-STEM graduates and their pay is plenty low enough, so nobody's going to throw money at them.
Don't forget, our education system isn't there to enrich lives, it's there to make people (at the top) rich. Heck, it started out as a system to train farm hands how to put up with factory work. I suppose we could change that, but nobody seems to want to spend the money.
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There seems to be a massive, systematic, institutional prejudice against boys that is causing them to fail.
I know this is parody -- and you did a good job -- but there actually are academics that have argued this (in primary education), and while it is of course controversial, some of the data are interesting.
See, for example, The War Against Boys
For example.
Girls get better grades than boys whenever there is any subjective component to grading, including how many points off for, for example, not showing all work. The greater the subjectivity in grading, the better will be the girls' grades over the boys. That is especially true for female teachers -- the vast majority -- but also true for male teachers. I'm not sure about trans teachers, though.
Note this from the paper:
"Girls tend to receive lower test scores relative to their school grades, whereas boys receive higher test scores relative to their school grades. There are multiple conjectures to explain this discrepancy in mean gender differences between tests and grades (e.g. on average, girls behave better, which gives them an advantage in grades, but they fare worse when tested on novel material that was not covered in class)[29]. Regardless of the source of these differences, teacher-assigned grades are likely to affect students’ lives, and it is a reasonable conjecture that they have a greater impact on students’ academic self-concept than standardised test scores[1]. Furthermore, grades are at least as good a predictor of success at university (measured by grade point average and graduation rate)[30,31]. Therefore, if gender differences in variability were impacting girls’ decisions to pursue STEM, we would expect to see these differences reflected in school grades."
That means that on an objective scale, boys outperform girls. This is why standardized tests are being phased out of admissions processes.
Oh dear goodness please tell me their isn't actually an "Ovaries in Coding" initiative. I can't dare try to look that up to see.
It bounces off the walls and you hear screaming?
I object to power without constructive purpose. --Spock
There is a huge difference between completing a grade school course and having what it takes to succeed in a STEM career like researcher. You don't have to be unusually gifted at math to succeed in K-12 math, nor do you need the level of perseverance necessary to complete a multi-year research project.
Not saying that there is a difference between the sexes, but as someone with nearly a decade of STEM career experience, it's obvious that this study does not say much about career-level work.
"What lies behind us, and what lies before us are tiny matters compared to what lies within us." Ralph Waldo Emerson
skeletongatheringdust.jpg
You laugh, but we complain about this a lot.
Up through middle school we would get project assignments from non-art teachers that involved what amounted to an arts and crafts project (eg, a history assignment that was a diorama about Lincoln or something).
My son always got bad grades on those projects despite having a B+ or an A in the class generally because art wasn't his thing, and the grading on the project was biased towards its artistic content. I would inevitably go in to gripe about the grade he got and I would see the high-scoring projects were nearly all by girls, many of whom seem to be into "coloring".
And nearly all these projects were assigned by female teachers. Their responses were really frustrating, a lot of bullshit about the importance of presentation quality of submitted work, etc. "What about their actual knowledge of the subject?" and the teachers would kind of blanch and not want to say anymore.
My take is there is some kind of low-level bias going on here, the teachers see the girls being less interested in the subject matter and toss them an easy one to boost their grades. Last year we only had two, and my *wife* actually did the artistic part of the work herself on one of them -- still only a C+!! My wife was super pissed and thought that it was a definite sign that the grade was being issued based on gender, not on content, because from a production value perspective it was like business-meeting quality.
This year during the fall "curriculum night" I actually asked all the teachers how many "coloring assignments" there would be. Most didn't understand and I explained, "You know, those assignments where we do something artistic that has nothing to do with the content of the curriculum and is judged on artistic merit". To a person, all the female teachers looked pissed that I asked that. Totally busted.
I'm surprised that nobody has yet suggested that women be forced to study a STEM degree in college. If you want to 'fix' the 'problem', why not go back to the source? "Oh, you wanted to do gender studies? Too bad, we need more women in STEM so enjoy EE"
Men tend to think they are great and always right even when they are not. Women are taught to go along to get along even when the answer is wrong. The big egos of the men allow them to complete very difficult subject matter even when they are not as good as some of the women who drop out of the program. The fact they are encouraged to learn everything on tier own rather than bother with the classes helps a lot especially at the higher levels of math and science.
It's almost as though gender doesn't dictate intelligence... and that the discrepancy in gender representation has more to do with individual pursuits than ability. Shocking.
What is there to say, the evidence speaks for itself...women want equality...they got it years ago, can we now move on to the next big 'moral dilemma' in this gender gap debate...like how to get boys/men to graduate highschool at the same rate was girls, not kill themselves at a higher rate in their teen year, get them to enter college & graduate at the same rates...O and just to show I"m not biased...have men take freakin' responsibility for the children they have, like in actually being in their lives, but they can start by paying for raising them.
Statistics are clearly showing that minorities and women are greatly over represented in college intakes in comparison to their grades. Schools are picking lower scoring individuals to satisfy some sort of equality metric; those people consistently fail and drop out resulting in a much more natural end result
The good news is liberals get to pat themselves on the back and say that they're helping. Feels > reals
According to the summary, there is a gender difference!
The research, published today in Nature Communications, also shows that girls do better than boys in non-STEM subjects.
In other words, on average, girls have better grades than boys, but STEM is their weak point.
Think of it that way: imagine girls are excellent at poker, and average at chess, while boys suck at poker and are average at chess. Why would girls play chess when they have higher chance of winning by playing poker, and probably enjoy it more in the process? And why would boys play poker just get owned by any passing girl when they can play chess on a more level playing field. In the end boys will probably end up being better chess players because girls will be too busy playing poker.
The point of working hard is usually to get what you want, but we are never guaranteed the outcome we want. Some people prefer to work smarter instead. Also not guaranteed an outcome. The point of the scholarship is to encourage a lot of people to work hard , work smart, or both to increase their interest and learning in whatever field (or in general) in hope if getting the scholarship. Not everyone can get the scholarship even if they work hard because there is only so much money allocated.
So the process worked. The existence of the scholarship motivated you to work hard. You didn't need the money, you turned out just fine. The girl didn't need the money either but someone has to get the money or else the scholarship loses its effectiveness next year. The girl maybe looks better in a photo, or maybe they know her parents, or maybe she just wrote a better paper than you.
If you want a scholarship to exist that behaves differently, you can fund your own and set the rules, or you can go the SJW route and try shaming people who are already doing it into letting you control the distribution of their wealth for the greater good on behalf of all the people. Or plug yourself back into the matrix and have a good daydream.
Statistics are clearly showing that minorities and women are greatly over represented in college intakes in comparison to their grades.
Too broad a statement. Asians are significantly under-represented in comparison to their grades.
I don't see a problem with a bit of bias in favor of low-income students, because we know grades aren't a sufficient measure there: give them a bit of slack. But of course there are too many places with explicit racial quotas, instead of basing stuff on other background factors, which actually screws some minorities badly.
Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
So the female dominated field of teaching, designed to accommodate teaching females gives better grades to females.
Troll is not a replacement for I disagree.
If you're a girl and you're getting an A in English Lit and an A- in Math, you may opt for the English Lit and use it towards a glamorous career in Marketing. You're going to go in to those areas that play to your strengths and you're going to end up leading a more fulfilling life than if you went in to Economics.
If you're a boy and you're getting an A- in Math and a B+ in English Lit, you may opt for Math and use it towards a glamorous career in Economics. You're going to go in to those areas that play to your strengths and you're going to end up leading a more fulfilling life than if you went in to Marketing.
Turns out, that in those situations, everyone wins.
Since it turns out that boys and girls perform equally in STEM while women excel in just about all other areas, it may be that the reason boys are in STEM is because it's beneath women to go in to it.
lalalalalalalal im not listening
lsalalala
fucking drumpf! impeach drumpf! creepy porn lawyer 3 ever!
She is really quiet. Any girl who does not moan naturally and has to rub her clit isn't having the soul bending orgasm that makes her feel like what she is: a subservient woman who needs to have every last inch of her dominated. Those screams are of pain, for your mom is the driest old hag in the world. It would take an Exxon Valdez class event to get her slick enough to take my beer can sized birth canal stretcher.
There have been many studies that show female teachers consistently mark girls higher and boys lower in homework and test grades whereas the male teachers give consistent grading results regardless of the student gender.
I agree with what you are saying, and was planning to post a similar response about how grade can be meaningless in a lot of cases.
But instead, your post made me wonder what counts as "expertise"?
I think beyond "clearly an expert" and "clearly not an expert" it all gets very murky. I would be good to be able to measure it, but I don't know how you could do it. The Dunning-Kruger effect comes into play.
I remember when I interviewed for my current job, which is mostly a Windows shop, one of the architects asked me about my proficiency with Linux. I said that I had switched to it in '99 and never looked back. He said "oh, so you're an expert at it" and I assured him that I was not an expert. I said that I knew enough about it to know that there is so much more that I don't know. He tested me with a few questions like what distro I ran, how I would do this or that. I tried not to geek out in my answers, but he could tell I wasn't faking it.
As a manager, I always find it interesting, and quite disheartening, when interviewing candidates about their technical skills. It seems that candidates now like to categorize their skills by expertise levels. It's kind of disheartening when someone says they are an expert in Linux and they have no answer to "vi or emacs?". Or they don't know what grep is. I once had someone who "helped architect and implement in AWS". Since we were building a platform on AWS, I asked him about his experience with that. He admitted that he had NEVER worked in AWS.
So as I said, it would be nice to be able to measure expertise, I don't see how you could realistically actually do that.
My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.
I left the part out about my PENIS being pinecone shaped.
lol
Did others of you notice the logical fallacy written right into the summary? (1) Grades in STEM are equal. (2) Grades in other classes are higher for girls. (Therefore) under representation of women in STEM careers later in life are not due to differences in grades. Would it not be natural that girls would note that they have a comparative advantage in non STEM courses and focus their interests there? I don't actually believe that is the major factor that creates under-representation, but it shows the extremely confused thinking that is generated by the ideology that assumes that equal representation is the only outcome that rational unbiased decision making could create.
The headline is misleading. In the link to Nature Communications, under Figure 1, you see that there is a significant "variability hypothesis" showing in the general population (everyone, not just STEM). When you look at only students who study STEM subjects, the center of the bell curve between boys and girls comes closer together. However, that is only the center of the bell curve. Girls still have a narrower distribution than boys, but their center's move closer when you only count the students studying STEM. This is important to note, because averages are not real people. In the real world, you have to account for every individual because these real people are the ones who need help, not some abstract group average.
Also, the effects of Common Core math should be accounted for. It is shown to not benefit girls, but harm boys. Modern gender equality in its true form.
1) 1.6M is a very large sample size and large sample sizes [typically] have less variability throughout the data set, including the extremes.
2) There are decades of very well documented systemic gender biases in STEM fields.
3) The "variability hypothesis" still begs the question: Why? If one claims extreme-spectrum boys are inherently/genetically/socially better at STEM than extreme-spectrum girls, that claim ignores the data from nearly 1.6M other students showing girls and boys are equally adept. I think it's a little ridiculous not to consider decades of systemic gender bias to at least be a factor in the "variability."
I should have put minority in quotes because how we define minorities is totally arbitrary. Asians are typically considered "white" in these equality metrics. Mixed race people are considered depending on what suits the equality metrics best.
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> I've heard of boys being told that cooking and even book clubs are not for them, due to toxic ideas of what masculinity is a
Even if a boy grows his hair long, below his shoulder, he gets told "You need to get a cut... you look like a girl." Teachers, preachers, random audlts, fellow classmates/bullies. There's nothing more natural than long hair (for both sexes) but our society won't allow it.
"I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall
Maybe, just maybe, the gender disparity in STEM is not because of lack of ability, but because of lack of interest?
Let's be honest - men as a group are more interested in things, and women are more interested in people. As a group. Obviously there are overlaps on both sides of the bell curves.
This is not something that requires "fixing". It just is what it is.
They banned us.
I was required to take a focus liberal arts area, so I found the one with the best ratio (psychology, had yet to lean to not stick my dick into crazy).
Turns out, every engineering student had done the same thing. We were required to take a liberal arts focus area _other_than_psych_, as we were blowing the curves while treating the classes as a dating pool.
John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
lol fag
Now, please, conduct studies on vehicle manning and map interpretation and let's see that, LOL!
You may have a hard time believing it, but it's generally believed to be true.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
...believed to be true based on one psychology researcher's work from 1920's and 1930's, and a few cherry-picked modern studies, which on the whole are pretty mixed and inconclusive. But thanks for the link anyway... I learn something new everyday....
Those things were the bane of my existence from first grade to seventh grade. Evaluating a first grader's reading ability by having them draw animals is just stupid and it didn't get less stupid from there, only more complicated. Art class I could handle because they actually taught you what you needed to do - these projects just assumed a level of artistic ability that a lot of people don't have. They're a great way to induce anxiety and undermine self confidence.
I recall two unbelievably obnoxious and rude job interviews --- the only two I ever ended with a curt word and booked from!
The first one the interviewer was an East Coast Jewish-American-princess type, who accused me (who grew up in a Catholic orphanage, fought the wars and did the chores, etc.) of having all this infinite male privilege unlike this scion of wealth from NY --- she was certain I had the advantage in everything technical simply from being a male. I walked out of this Jewish-owned and operated (not being anti-Semitic, but it is pertinent to this story) biopharmaceutical firm in Rockville, MD, only a few years later to learn they had sold those Anthrax samples to Saddam Hussein of Iraq in use in the genocide against the Kurds!
The second interview I ended due to the obnoxious female interviewing me was with a cretin with Aon Consulting --- she was then in Seattle, I believe, but would transfer to the WTC in NYC before 9/11/01. I heard her voice some months after 9/11 when she had phoned in to the 911 operator, asking if she should remain in a building just hit by a Boeing passenger airliner? She was not only obnoxious, but stupid until that day she died!
Girls are pursued. Guys do the pursuing. Guys who are too shy to do the pursuing end up spending more time by themselves...and many of us have a knack to tinker.
If girls are pursued they have to constantly say no to get that type of time. This is aided by girls often developing much earlier than guys.
Not rocket science.
Its well known that females outperform males in primary and secondary school in traditional classroom settings. All this is is another proof in a long line of proofs that there is a female sex specific advantage in the sit down lecture format and is great enough to overcome any advantage males might collectively have in stem. Where males tend to have an advantage is in some post secondary stem fields especially at the higher levels and then for only a subset of men (the greater male variability theory) So TLDR this study actually supports the opposite of what it concludes.
There's no absolute way to exclude them, that I'm aware of. But that's not really how science works. We don't have to exclude every single possibility before drawing a conclusion, or we would never be able to draw any conclusions at all. As someone pointed out below, when we are talking about differences between sexes biology is a default explanation. If you can exclude biological factors as the explanation, great, then we know they're not at play. This study doesn't do that; rather it reinforces what every other study has found: greater variability in males than in females. You can claim that this doesn't prove that the difference is biological, but given the persistence of these findings across cultures it's a fairly safe bet that biology is a significant factor.
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This is rated funny, but this is not funny.
It is a problem and it needs to be solved.
All bias in society are a bad thing, and bias against males are important to solve as well. My understanding is that federal funding for this is available as well. Did anyone bother applying to get it?
Or maybe he's right considering the misandric statement you just made.
But, I was engaging in "Satire", a form of humor that's purpose is to critique and draw attention to a social issue. So, "Funny" is appropriate in my book. "Funny" as in humorously on point.
Satire. The two are slightly different things.
Imagine if they used this time to fix politicans that are corrupt.
Can we get back to just focusing on EVERYONE for STEM....
It is quite scary and sad how much this post is both a joke but dead on in so many ways.
begs the question
You don't know what that phrase means. Stop using it.
Funny thing: when I was a kid, boys with long hair were told "You need to get a cut... you look like a satanist heavy metal fan." Teachers, preachers, random audlts, fellow classmates/bullies.
Gender differences manifest the strongest where mating comes into play. It's by emphasising those differences that people men and women alike seek advantage in the mating market. That's why often men act more manly than they are and women act more girly than they ought to.
We suffer more in our imagination than in reality. - Seneca
Even if a boy grows his hair long, below his shoulder, he gets told "You need to get a cut... you look like a girl."
I had long hair for a while. I often got "You look like Jesus, Curt Cobain,-" and a few others. That and any older people that saw me walking would look at me in fear as thought I was some terrifying criminal. I remember looking up stuff about long hair and interviews, and I found forums online for hiring managers and such. I would see them say stuff like: "If a guy comes in and his hair is below his ears, I automatically mark him as a failed interview and nothing he or his resume says will change that for me."
Results have converged because stem subjects have become more and more about written answers than pure maths to appeal more to two holes. No surprises once the actual work becomes real maths and soldering and circuits the girls go to HR.
The write of this study is so far from what the data shows it's silly. The headline is that there is no reason to see more men in stem than women. However the data shows that is the case at 10% of the population, i.e. if more than 10% of people work in stem it will be majority women and if less than 10% of people work in stem it will be majority men. What makes this study misleading is it didn't mention that only 6.2% of careers are in stem fields. It also didn't mention what the expected break-down was at this point.
They only basically had to destroy boys to do it. Now they're on a level playing field. They have changed the way classes are taught and changed the material such that it favors girls. Boys no longer have a learning environment that plays to their strengths, but rather pulls them down.
Statistics are clearly showing that minorities and women are greatly over represented in college intakes in comparison to their grades.
Cold you please provide citations? Cursory searching did not reveal (to me) research asserting this. Thanks.
I don't think the grading itself is biased, but I do think that female teachers like to throw their female students these "girl projects" that are definitely skewed to female-oriented skill sets.
Maybe this means most education tasks suffer from a male bias, but we're talking classes like Social Students and English where it's reading, writing, class discussion, fairly neutral things that ought not have much gender bias.
Grading has around 30% face factor... so trouble some teenage kid that can pass test with all correct answers can get at end of course grade 30% off just because his behaviour is unwished. female asskissing behaviour then again gains you better grades and being nice... shitz but that isnt what happens to teenager boys :D
also the smart but lazy syndrome is really strong among young boys
Boys and girls have both the same abilities. However boys tend to be more inclined to pursue studies in science.
Is this really true? I'm not so sure you have the evidence to back that claim up. Certainly more men go into STEM fields than women currently but that does not prove that the reason is because of interest or inclination. I'm not convinced that men are inherently more interested in technical fields than women. I think the reasons that women currently tend to avoid these fields is more complicated than mere inclination. The reasons seem (to me) to be predominately cultural expectations with some other factors thrown in there too.
I saw a study a while back that the #1 factor in whether a girl decides to go into a STEM field turns out to be whether or not there is a female parent or close relative who is also in a STEM field. Turns out it's hard to imagine yourself in a job if you don't see anyone that resembles you in that job. Why don't we see more men in nursing for example? Certainly not a lack of aptitude for the job and I doubt it's any sort of inherent lack of interest in the work itself. I think the reasons are social stigma and holdover effects of traditional gender roles and it's something that happens to both genders differing only in the field where one or the other gender historically dominates. It's only recently that women achieved parity in admissions to medical school to become MDs. It used to be almost unheard of to find a male nurse but it's becoming more common. Honestly the reason I'm probably an engineer today is because I come from a family of engineers. Nobody around me in my school went into engineering and it wasn't a subject that was taught or explained in school. My wife probably would have made a terrific engineer but she never really had any exposure to the field until she met me. My sister got her undergraduate degree in civil engineering and I'm certain this is because she was exposed to the field as she grew up.