Saturday, November 16, 2013

False Assumptions on Sexist Discrimination

All engineers worth their bits know that a program won’t ever function correctly if its logic is based on false assumptions.  Unfortunately, politicians’ careers do not depend on the airtight validity of their assumptions like those of engineers.  Senator Ron Wyden makes a false assumption that the declining participation rate of women in computer science can be mostly explained by discrimination, which “[pushes] women into traditional female roles, such as teaching.”  Who is doing the discrimination, Ron Wyden?  In my university, the only step between a woman and a seat in an introductory CS course is an online class registry sheet waiting for her consent.  If a conscious choice not to study a certain field is unequivocally the result of discrimination, shouldn’t we also be concerned about the fact that only 18.3% of middle school and high school teachers were men in 2011?  Should we also be concerned that the prospect of fatherhood pushes men into more traditional male roles, such as engineering?  Maybe we shouldn’t be concerned, since it is not politically beneficial to discuss those disparities.

2 comments:

  1. There are unfortunate biases in both of those examples. Men that want to teach or do anything with children are often thought of as creepy or perverts, even though many of them just love teaching. The same thing happens in computer science, it's seen as full of creepy guys with their own geeky culture. The barriers aren't present in the institutions, it's in the perception of the people in and around them.

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  2. Answer: we should care about those things.
    And there is certainly more than just a registration form between a girl and that first introductory computer science class.

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