Teaching Children

Started by SidheLady, August 08, 2017, 04:54:18 PM

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SidheLady

So, I saw an advert this afternoon for a TV program, associated with this article

http://www.bbc.co.uk/mediacentre/proginfo/2017/33/no-more-boys-and-girls

I am fundamentally opposed to this kind of treatment, simply because we are different, there are neurological and biological differences between the genders.

Worse than this, I think teaching it to children is wrong, because they wont teach them anything else, just...this fallacy.

I am going to try and watch the program, but I fear it will be incredibly biased and wont look at other possible reasons for these differences, such as personal choices or situations, and heralds something horrible for our children

Please note, I am completely pro-equality of opportunity, I deeply believe that everyone has the right to try and do whatever they want, but, it must be accepted that not everyone will want to do everything.
"Dream, not of what you are, but what you want to be" - Lotus (aka spacemom!), warframe

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Lustful Bride

#1
Why cant they just let kids be kids? Teach them we are all different, but equal and that is a good thing. Let them decide on their own their oppinions on this.

It just feels like these children are being used as pawns for someone else's politics. I must also protest because I am against the idea of children ever being used like this, they are not to be experimented with. Let them develop on their own, they are not guinea pigs.

Merah

If biological and neurological differences are hard-wired, treating a class of boys and girls identically for six weeks isn't going to alter the kids' development at all. So what's the issue?

Lustful Bride

Personally my problem is more that this is done with children. That is my own personal feeling here, but if it was done with adults in like a six week course of them seeing how things are on the other side and such I would be for it. But I just don't feel children should be put into these things. I don't want to use the word 'social experiment' but its the closest thing I can think to use. I wish I could word my thoughts better but they are primarily emotional here. :/

Blythe

From the article:

QuoteAs a doctor he knows there are basic biological differences between the sexes, but he believes our biology can’t fully explain why men and women’s life chances - from pay, to careers are still so unequal in the UK.

Dr. Javid acknowledges that there are biological differences in the sexes; the tenor I got from the article is that he's saying there's more than just biology that accounts for disparities (like social conditioning & stereotyping, for one), and the gender-neutral teaching is to try to account for those factors to see if it makes a difference in learning environments.

Doesn't really seem like that big of a deal to me, honestly.

Merah

It sounds like this show is just exploring how gender is shaped in childhood. But treating all children equally should be normal, not a radical social experiment. They're just dramatizing it as such for the sake of controversy and drawing more viewers... which would seem to be working.

Merah

Also, if it were some kind of serious experiment, how would doing it with adults teach you anything about childhood formation of gender roles?

I know 'experimenting' with children implies that they're Nazi lab rats or something, but... well, they're not. They're just being treated equally to my understanding.

Lustful Bride

Quote from: Merah on August 08, 2017, 09:08:00 PM
Also, if it were some kind of serious experiment, how would doing it with adults teach you anything about childhood formation of gender roles?

I know 'experimenting' with children implies that they're Nazi lab rats or something, but... well, they're not. They're just being treated equally to my understanding.

I don't know. I'm just going to stop myself here before I continue making a fool of myself. I get way too emotional about things, especially involving kids that I forget to temper it with calm thoughts.

Iniquitous

I honestly do not see this as a bad thing.  As a society, we have said girls must wear pink and frill and lacy and flowers.  Boys must wear blue and sports related themes and tools and trains.  Why?   Boys must play with toy cars and military men and toy tools and such.  Girls must play with Easy Bake Ovens and baby dolls and barbie dolls and play kitchens.  Why?   Why do we, as a society, dictate what our children should dress like and like as toys based upon their physical gender?

Why do we say a woman is “bossy” and give it a negative tint when in a boy it is called being assertive and a leader? Why do we expect women to apologize for -everything- but not men?   Why are women in STEM fields underrepresented by an estimated 15% from their male counterparts?

What would happen if, while they are children, we stopped imposing stereotypes on them and let them be who they want to be?  I dare say it won’t be anything negative!

You can’t pull adults off the street to do this with. By the time we are adults, preconceived stereotypes are already set.  Usually in stone.  If we want to change the way women are treated, paid, encouraged then we have to start when they are young.  Break down the stereotypes.
Bow to the Queen; I'm the Alpha, the Omega, everything in between.


Oniya

Frankly, the 'experiment' looks highly flawed to me.  But to eliminate the flaws would introduce other issues (like the fact that the test subjects are below the age of informed consent).  They treat the kids one way in the classroom for 6 hours, and then what?  They get sent home in the evening to be treated the way their parents have always treated them for 10 hours. (Assuming 8 hours for sleep.)  It doesn't matter if Teacher says boys can play with dolls or do dress-up if Daddy blows a gasket when he sees his son clomping around in Mommy's shoes.

I'd like to see those stereotypes reduced, but the change needs to include the very parents who grew up with those stereotypes.
"Language was invented for one reason, boys - to woo women.~*~*~Don't think it's all been done before
And in that endeavor, laziness will not do." ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~Don't think we're never gonna win this war
Robin Williams-Dead Poets Society ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~Don't think your world's gonna fall apart
I do have a cause, though.  It's obscenity.  I'm for it.  - Tom Lehrer~*~All you need is your beautiful heart
O/O's Updated 5/11/21 - A/A's - Current Status! - Writing a novel - all draws for Fool of Fire up!
Requests updated March 17

Blythe

Quote from: Oniya on August 08, 2017, 09:39:35 PM
They treat the kids one way in the classroom for 6 hours, and then what?  They get sent home in the evening

Article linked in the OP does seem to address this, albeit in a roundabout indirect fashion.

Quote from: From the article, towards the end
Upset by the results, Dr Javid sets out a series of interventions both in class and at home to tackle these differences.

Kind of curious what the 'home' changes would be, though--that one seems an awful lot trickier to do.

Serephino

I definitely think stereotypes for genders should be done away with and kids treated equally.  It annoys the crap out of me when I see products marketed to women that are pink.  Because of genetics I possess a vagina, but I don't like pink or frilly things with lace.  I don't like wearing dresses.  The whole shoe obsession a lot of women seem to have just boggles my mind.  I'm like... I'm not really sure.  It seems most days that I have one foot in the girl box and the other in the boy box.  That is just me.  So no, genitals do not dictate what the individual does or does not like. 

Fury Aphrodisia

#12
I understand the concern about "doing this to children". I also find it odd that someone said "why not just let kids be kids?" Seems to me that's exactly what this "experiment" intends. Treat them all the same. Personally, I think Iniquitous was correct when it was mentioned that using adults for this, or even teenagers, would destroy the point. But let's think about potential results for a moment.

If the "experiment" succeeds, we'll have data that suggests further psychological study (which has been done since the advent of psychology and has led to many breakthroughs including ways to recognize the effects of abuse on children and I will absolutely not back down from expressing that I think no matter what your personal problem is with this procedure, we absolutely needed and that does away with any notions of discomfort on our end) will be necessary to determine if there is something we can do to prevent hardship.

If we have a failure, then the children all played with blocks for six weeks and move on with their lives.

They're not strapping electrodes to the children, they're not pumping them full of drugs, terrifying them, etc. They're just (*gasp*) treating them all the same. Let me ask you, as a parent of a child, isn't that what we want for our children? I want my boys to grow up understanding that they are worth a partner picking up the tab for a date, allowed to wear clothing that makes them feel good about themselves whatever that might be, allowed to make any and all decisions about their own body that do not inflict a decision on someone else (ie. can't decide "I'm going to punch that person now." That would defeat the purpose by forcing a decision to be hit on the other person). And I sure as hell want them to observe the same about the people around them. One of the greatest things I make my son repeat to me constantly, "Who makes decisions about (whomever)'s body?" The answer is always "them."

To extrapolate that, let's go with a gamble of numbers. My oldest son, a four-year-old starts school in a month. He is (mostly) white. He constantly talks about how he likes boys okay, but he just gushes about how he loves girls. He's a massive flirt. I'm willing to bet he will have an attraction to females of some sort at some point in his life. So let us begin there.

Under that assumption, let's pretend he goes to school with a bunch of kids that are never taught before the mold sets that there is a similarity between females and males (let's just start with a binary example). Those children, despite how I teach my son, will use the phrase "You can't _________, you're a girl." He hears this. There is doubt in his mind. The school says you can't hit girls, but boys will be boys. The school says "and over here, we have some dolls if any of you girls are interested." Very innocent turn of phrase often said without thinking, but it puts a thought in the mind of a child that there is a difference. Why wouldn't the boys be interested? Why is there something separate for girls?

They're using third year, which I believe is... seven? Eight? Years old. Before ten, in any case (Sorry, North American and not used to British levels). If they go through six weeks  now of subtle language shifts, un-separated activities designed to be shared by all (and in a very traditional society, perhaps a welcome change from the norm), it's the same as going through a geology unit in school. I remember going through one. It hasn't deeply impacted my life, but it made me think about rocks a little more for a while, and even now I realize I've retained some piece of information or another.

They're not hurting the children. I'd sign my boy up in a heartbeat. This is the sort of non-invasive psychological questing that leads to progression in society and how we treat each other. Not only am I not against it, but I'm actually for it.


Edit: Also, there is research that suggests that the previously-believed neurological differences in male and female brains come about later in life and are heavily influenced by environment, not biology. The last I heard, there were actually an array of brain "types" and none were strictly found in male or females. The only real difference seems to be the physical plumbing, which won't be effected by this study. They're studying equal treatment, not intercourse. THAT I'd have a problem with. This? This... should be typical.
Fire and Flora - My Ons and Offs  - Updated May 17th '17 ---- Aphrodisia Acedia - (A&A's) - Updated September 9th '17 ---- Sinful Inspirations - Story Ideas - Updated May 17th '17

~I am not the voice of reason: I am the voice of truth. I do not fall gently on hopeful ears. I am strident and abrasive. I do not bend to the convenience of comfort. I am unyeilding. I do not change with wind and whim, but am always standing, unchanging, steady, constant and persevering. You rebuke me when you need me most, yet still I fight. The enemies of truth are everywhere. But I am not defeated.~

Oniya

Quote from: Serephino on August 08, 2017, 10:21:38 PM
I definitely think stereotypes for genders should be done away with and kids treated equally.  It annoys the crap out of me when I see products marketed to women that are pink.  Because of genetics I possess a vagina, but I don't like pink or frilly things with lace.  I don't like wearing dresses.  The whole shoe obsession a lot of women seem to have just boggles my mind.  I'm like... I'm not really sure.  It seems most days that I have one foot in the girl box and the other in the boy box.  That is just me.  So no, genitals do not dictate what the individual does or does not like. 


I'm with you there, Sere.  I have nothing pink except for a pair of socks that got in with the colors by mistake.  One pair of shoes (black Nikes go with everything).  Lace - only if I make it myself, and even then it doesn't end up 'frilly'.  I was interested in a dollhouse once, but that was because it was a detailed wooden kit that you literally built like a real house.  And ended up getting stuck with a hand-me-down prefab job that one of my sisters had outgrown.

I don't think that the experiment is likely to be harmful - I just don't see it as rigorous enough to be conclusive.  Fury, you say that you'd sign your kid up for it in a heartbeat.  I wouldn't have had any issue if Little Oni's elementary school had done something like this.  But you probably would already be likely to teach your kid that these gender stereotypes aren't valid (just like me).  The people that are huffing around saying men and women should stay in their own little boxes aren't likely to go out of their way to put their kids in this kind of program, and would influence the results by reinforcing the stereotypes at home.
"Language was invented for one reason, boys - to woo women.~*~*~Don't think it's all been done before
And in that endeavor, laziness will not do." ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~Don't think we're never gonna win this war
Robin Williams-Dead Poets Society ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~Don't think your world's gonna fall apart
I do have a cause, though.  It's obscenity.  I'm for it.  - Tom Lehrer~*~All you need is your beautiful heart
O/O's Updated 5/11/21 - A/A's - Current Status! - Writing a novel - all draws for Fool of Fire up!
Requests updated March 17

Fury Aphrodisia

This is true. I'm convinced it wouldn't harm the children, but I'm not convinced it's going to do much good where it wouldn't have already. That said, at least the children will have the experience of a gender-neutral setting for overall achievement to influence thoughts in the future.

When I was ... twelve or thirteen, my class did a social experiment where we broke the two classes of grade sevens into halves and tossed one half of each class in together in one room and the other sets in the other. I was in group B. In group B, we were told we were going to imagine for a while that we were an insular tribe trading with another tribe we didn't often interact with. Our goal was to take our two popsicle sticks and try to negotiate for eight more from various members of the other tribe, who were given three each. Our group was meant to be more primitive in language, and we spoke in designated noises rather than a full language and were instructed not to react to anything the other group said that wasn't strictly the same. We were told to be creative.

When we met with the other group, they started asking us all sorts of questions that had nothing to do with trading. They asked us how our mothers were and if our families were decently happy. We, like the little cavepeople we were supposed to be, descended on them like locusts, pressed them aggressively for their popsicle sticks and when they largely gave up and simply gave them to us in fistfuls, we were so proud.

Turns out, they were instructed to act as a "civilized" tribe and ask after the matriarchs and families of each other tribe member, to value conversation over material and so forth. Basically it was an exercise on the importance of communication effectively and understanding the goals of others in order to mutually benefit. To this day, however, that one, half-hour exercise sticks in my mind and has indeed shaped my love of descriptive writing, to an extent. It's certainly driven me to hone my skill.

Basically the point I'm making here is that while it might not do a lot of good in shaping the beliefs, it might do just enough to let people know there is another way, which they can then reach for when they get stuck at something.
Fire and Flora - My Ons and Offs  - Updated May 17th '17 ---- Aphrodisia Acedia - (A&A's) - Updated September 9th '17 ---- Sinful Inspirations - Story Ideas - Updated May 17th '17

~I am not the voice of reason: I am the voice of truth. I do not fall gently on hopeful ears. I am strident and abrasive. I do not bend to the convenience of comfort. I am unyeilding. I do not change with wind and whim, but am always standing, unchanging, steady, constant and persevering. You rebuke me when you need me most, yet still I fight. The enemies of truth are everywhere. But I am not defeated.~

SidheLady

#15
I spent much of the evening looking into different facets of this, and the nuerologically differences are absolutely fascinating.

However, I have issue with treating children as "gender neutral". What if the boys WANT to play with the cars and the blocks, what if the girls WANT to play with the dolls and the art supplies? And what defines a toy as a gender either way? Making it pink or blue?

However, my thought is that this will be politcally and idologially driven rather than scientifically driven, but it does seem to ignore biological and genetic factors on the brain, rather than a scientific one, or a societal betterment one.

Teach kids equality, be respectful and take advantage of differences to help strenghen the group, keep them happy and healthy seems a much better idea than trying to teach them nuetrality, it might take better in the long run as well
"Dream, not of what you are, but what you want to be" - Lotus (aka spacemom!), warframe

I have Discord, ask to contact me!

My Games including Sassy Space Vixens and the Gentry https://elliquiy.com/forums/index.php?topic=253546.0

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Serephino

I once owned a pink mp3 player.  The only reason was because the pink one was $3 cheaper than the very same model of any other color.  I figured I could deal with pink if it saved me some money.  But I agree, the study wouldn't do much unless the kids were treated the same at home.  I actually wish an effective study like this could be done.  I'm curious, and I agree it wouldn't harm the children involved.   

Fury Aphrodisia

Part of letting them be "gender neutral" isn't keeping them from playing what they want. It's simply not barring or implying that some toys are for only one set of children. They're not keeping the kids from playing with anything, that's not what this is about.

In the past, there were certain activities it was socially acceptable to tell boys and girls they shouldn't do. Pushing a boy to play with a truck instead of a doll. Pushing a girl to play with crafts instead of blocks. Gender neutral doesn't mean these toys are taken away, it's just simply not what this means. Your objection seems to be predicated on the concept that they won't be allowed to play at all, which is ludicrous. Letting kids play with what they want is literally the point of all this.

Biological and genetic factors on the brain are not gender driven, and even if they were, that should mean that allowing children to play in a gender neutral environment would reinforce that by allowing them to play with what they want rather than what they're pushed towards.

Growing up, I was pushed towards frills, dolls, pink, boy bands, fashion magazines... My father once told me I'd never be taken seriously as a human being if I didn't start looking the part I was meant to play (in this case, he meant wearing a skirt). Because of this, I rebelled and refused all trappings of femaledom. I am a cis female: I am born female, identify as female, both my gender and my sex are female. If I hadn't been pushed so hard towards it, I might have liked dolls or pink. As it is, to this day, I still hate pink. Hate it. Because it was forced on me and not something I was able to come to on my own. It wasn't a sign of femininity - it was a symbol of a complete lack of will.

Now, what if a girl really wants to play with a model airplane? Are you saying that it would be better for her to not be allowed than to let a boy play with dolls if he wants to? They're not going gender-LESS, they're going gender-NEUTRAL. Like neutral on a car - neither gas nor brake. Just whatever is already happening inside.
Fire and Flora - My Ons and Offs  - Updated May 17th '17 ---- Aphrodisia Acedia - (A&A's) - Updated September 9th '17 ---- Sinful Inspirations - Story Ideas - Updated May 17th '17

~I am not the voice of reason: I am the voice of truth. I do not fall gently on hopeful ears. I am strident and abrasive. I do not bend to the convenience of comfort. I am unyeilding. I do not change with wind and whim, but am always standing, unchanging, steady, constant and persevering. You rebuke me when you need me most, yet still I fight. The enemies of truth are everywhere. But I am not defeated.~

Oniya

#18
Quote from: SidheLady on August 09, 2017, 09:20:49 AM
And what defines a toy as a gender either way? Making it pink or blue?

I've seen this guide all over the Internet.  Please put down any beverages before clicking.

On a somewhat more serious note, there's a marvelous blog called 'Pigtail Pals and Ballcap Buddies' that's done by a mom who is raising her kids in an 'Colors are for everyone/toys are for everyone' sort of way.  She points out things like how Lego used to be advertised as a toy for all kids (old enough not to try eating it).  And anyone remember the old Slinky song?  *Earworm engaged*  She also goes into more serious subjects like how to talk to your kids about body integrity and bullying.
"Language was invented for one reason, boys - to woo women.~*~*~Don't think it's all been done before
And in that endeavor, laziness will not do." ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~Don't think we're never gonna win this war
Robin Williams-Dead Poets Society ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~Don't think your world's gonna fall apart
I do have a cause, though.  It's obscenity.  I'm for it.  - Tom Lehrer~*~All you need is your beautiful heart
O/O's Updated 5/11/21 - A/A's - Current Status! - Writing a novel - all draws for Fool of Fire up!
Requests updated March 17

Fury Aphrodisia

I have always loved that graphic.

LArgely, however, these are examples of what I mean when I say (or think, or hear of) "gender neutral". Not "Let's take all the toys away and make you play with a stick."
Fire and Flora - My Ons and Offs  - Updated May 17th '17 ---- Aphrodisia Acedia - (A&A's) - Updated September 9th '17 ---- Sinful Inspirations - Story Ideas - Updated May 17th '17

~I am not the voice of reason: I am the voice of truth. I do not fall gently on hopeful ears. I am strident and abrasive. I do not bend to the convenience of comfort. I am unyeilding. I do not change with wind and whim, but am always standing, unchanging, steady, constant and persevering. You rebuke me when you need me most, yet still I fight. The enemies of truth are everywhere. But I am not defeated.~

SidheLady

Quote from: Oniya on August 09, 2017, 12:05:22 PM
I've seen this guide all over the Internet.  Please put down any beverages before clicking.

LMAO....oh that's awesome.

Quote from: Oniya on August 09, 2017, 12:05:22 PM
On a somewhat more serious note, there's a marvelous blog called 'Pigtail Pals and Ballcap Buddies' that's done by a mom who is raising her kids in an 'Colors are for everyone/toys are for everyone' sort of way.  She points out things like how Lego used to be advertised as a toy for all kids (old enough not to try eating it).  And anyone remember the old Slinky song?  *Earworm engaged*  She also goes into more serious subjects like how to talk to your kids about body integrity and bullying.

If it's an advertising issue, then surely it's a responsibility of the companies promoting the items?

Also, weird point, that pink was originally the colour for boys, and blue for girls

http://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/when-did-girls-start-wearing-pink-1370097/ 

it's kinda interesting
"Dream, not of what you are, but what you want to be" - Lotus (aka spacemom!), warframe

I have Discord, ask to contact me!

My Games including Sassy Space Vixens and the Gentry https://elliquiy.com/forums/index.php?topic=253546.0

My general Ons and Offs (will be updated soonish whenever I remember and get around to it)
https://www.f-list.net/c/sidhelady/

Oniya

I also find it amusing that 'girls' multispeed bikes have a lower bar (for skirts!).  If I were a guy, I'd prefer the lower bar because it would give my feet a chance to hit the ground if I came off the seat (instead of other things hitting the crossbar).
"Language was invented for one reason, boys - to woo women.~*~*~Don't think it's all been done before
And in that endeavor, laziness will not do." ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~Don't think we're never gonna win this war
Robin Williams-Dead Poets Society ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~Don't think your world's gonna fall apart
I do have a cause, though.  It's obscenity.  I'm for it.  - Tom Lehrer~*~All you need is your beautiful heart
O/O's Updated 5/11/21 - A/A's - Current Status! - Writing a novel - all draws for Fool of Fire up!
Requests updated March 17

AmberStarfire

#22
I don't see the harm in the experiment. It would be interesting to see what results they get.

I was a girl who liked trucks (and other passed-down toys from my brother, like his Millennium Falcon. I wish we still had that, it would probably be worth a fortune now). I also wore blue more than pink. Maybe things have changed but growing up, it was like pink and blue were known as somewhat girl's and boy's colours. It was kind of like a known stereotype but you wore what you wanted (and once in school, the uniform was maroon in infants/primary school, and navy blue in high school for everyone). I usually opted for shorts rather than skirts, because they were more practical when running around, playing sports or climbing. As an adult I own a combination of men's and women's shoes, and I sometimes wear men's and unisex t-shirts, even though I'm a woman. I think women find it easier to get away with wearing clothes belonging to the opposite gender, but while a lot of women would wear mens' t-shirts, not as many would wear shoes.

The point is you can listen up to a point, and then do what you want. That's how I was raised. I don't imagine too many people other than the occasional parent enforce the 'pink for girls' and 'blue for boys' stereotype. Growing up it was a choice, other than gifts and things with gender-associated colours. I imagine some parents don't ask their kids which item of clothing they want to wear, and just buy clothes for them, but many parents do.

If you look past gender, clothes are just things that fit well or not, and are styled in a way that is socially-acceptable or not. Clothing colour doesn't really make much difference.

What did occur to me when I read the article was if the kids are raised gender-neutral (which would probably require more than just during their time at school), when they go out into the world, they may not find that's how things are. Personally, I don't see a whole lot of difference between genders, but I've seen views from others that seem to differentiate the genders much more.


Serephino

Unfortunately it's easier for women to wear men's clothing and what not than it is the other way around.  If a boy wants to play with a doll it's a huge deal.  I remember watching a 'What Would You Do?' episode about that very thing.  Now, it's been a while, and my memory is not that great, but the set up was this actor boy and his actor dad were in this toy shop.  The boy wants to buy a doll, and the dad gets on his case about it.  A lot of women came up to the dad and told him it shouldn't be a big deal if his son wants a doll.  But other men.. oh boy...  It's like if a guy shows any kind of feminine trait it makes him weak and less than.  He's not a real man.  It drives me up a wall.  If kids could be taught at a young age that people are individuals and don't usually fit neatly into a little box that would be super.

Cookie

Quote from: Serephino on August 09, 2017, 05:22:16 PM
Unfortunately it's easier for women to wear men's clothing and what not than it is the other way around.  If a boy wants to play with a doll it's a huge deal.  I remember watching a 'What Would You Do?' episode about that very thing.  Now, it's been a while, and my memory is not that great, but the set up was this actor boy and his actor dad were in this toy shop.  The boy wants to buy a doll, and the dad gets on his case about it.  A lot of women came up to the dad and told him it shouldn't be a big deal if his son wants a doll.  But other men.. oh boy...  It's like if a guy shows any kind of feminine trait it makes him weak and less than.  He's not a real man.  It drives me up a wall.  If kids could be taught at a young age that people are individuals and don't usually fit neatly into a little box that would be super.


Yeah this!

I think part of it's a bit of sexism, where a man being more like a woman is just seen as bad.  Another part is this whole "we must be really masculine and puff our chests out"  mentality some people have.  In certain groups, the more a guy conforms to masculine stereotypes the better man or even person he is (often women too who think this, not just a guy thing).  Maybe I'm biased, but that all seems very wrongheaded, and kind of dumb to me.
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Fury Aphrodisia

Quote from: SidheLady on August 09, 2017, 02:17:08 PM
If it's an advertising issue, then surely it's a responsibility of the companies promoting the items?

To a degree, I agree with you. However, I also find that the advertisers will do what sells. That's their job, wholly and completely. Our options in that case are to either A) do away with capitalism and in North America? Good luck. or B) cause most people to give up something that's been ingrained in them through learning (And not inherently) since the dawn of time. How do we do that when they've learned it so thoroughly? Easy... we convince them it's true. How do we do that? Well, glad you asked.....

These are no different than the feel-good social experiments you see on highly-edited Facebook videos that gain so many likes, reactions, shares and comments, with the difference being that this ... this is... uh...

Actually, it's no different. It's going to be as widely available as a Facebook video, it's going to be liked by the same kinds of people, disliked by the same kinds of people, either enrage or entrench the same sorts of sensibilities, meet the same kind of backlash, and in the end, be just as questionable in its authenticity.
Fire and Flora - My Ons and Offs  - Updated May 17th '17 ---- Aphrodisia Acedia - (A&A's) - Updated September 9th '17 ---- Sinful Inspirations - Story Ideas - Updated May 17th '17

~I am not the voice of reason: I am the voice of truth. I do not fall gently on hopeful ears. I am strident and abrasive. I do not bend to the convenience of comfort. I am unyeilding. I do not change with wind and whim, but am always standing, unchanging, steady, constant and persevering. You rebuke me when you need me most, yet still I fight. The enemies of truth are everywhere. But I am not defeated.~

Sara Nilsson

Quote from: Serephino on August 09, 2017, 05:22:16 PM
Unfortunately it's easier for women to wear men's clothing and what not than it is the other way around.  If a boy wants to play with a doll it's a huge deal.  I remember watching a 'What Would You Do?' episode about that very thing.  Now, it's been a while, and my memory is not that great, but the set up was this actor boy and his actor dad were in this toy shop.  The boy wants to buy a doll, and the dad gets on his case about it.  A lot of women came up to the dad and told him it shouldn't be a big deal if his son wants a doll.  But other men.. oh boy...  It's like if a guy shows any kind of feminine trait it makes him weak and less than.  He's not a real man.  It drives me up a wall.  If kids could be taught at a young age that people are individuals and don't usually fit neatly into a little box that would be super.


^^ That so much.

As someone who was expected to like traditional boy stuff it made many years of my life a living HELL! I wanted to play with dolls with the girls, jumprope etc. But any suggestion of that was enough to be bullied. No was supposed to like soccer, trucks, army guys. Later on it gets even worse.

A woman can wear mens clothing and no one bats an eye, she is just empowered, strong, independent. A man wearing womens clothing, a whimp, a sissy, a weakling.

For those of us that are not cis, don't fit into the standard template this can be harsh, downright dangerous at times. I would LOVE if a boy can pick up a doll and play with it one moment and pick up a tank and play with that the next and vice versa. That can only benefit everyone.

DelightfullyMAD

I do find the idea of allowing children to play with what they want to be a great notion.  I had a relatively unstructured upbringing, my mother mostly letting me just play with whatever I wanted... though in the end I usually ended up reading books instead.  Which always made grounding me sort of hard for my parents, since they couldn't really justify taking books away from me :P

Parents that want to let their kids play with whatever toys they like are perfectly fine.  Girls want to play with tanks and trucks?  Let em.  Boys wanna play with dolls and ovens?  Sure.  That being said, I have known some parents of kids who went to my middle school who did take this one step further.  They didn't just let their children pick the toys they wanted, they specifically treated their son like their daughter, and vice versa.  I am given to understand that there are some parents out there who are trying experimental parenting methods, and when you are using your own children as a social experiment, no matter how well meaning, that does rub me the wrong way.  Giving your son the option to play with a doll or an easy-bake is one thing, insisting that they do because you want to break the harmful male stereotype is another.
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Oniya

I will point out that teaching your son how to cook - or your daughter how to use tools - is something we could use a lot more of.  How to handle the equipment safely.  How to follow the instructions.  How to deal with mistakes/emergencies.  They don't need to go all Emeril LeGasse or Rosie the Riveter, but being able to 'do for' yourself in both arenas is very useful in those first years out on your own.  Flat tire in the middle of nowhere (and no cell reception)?  Need to stretch what's in your fridge until pay-day?  These sorts of situations don't restrict themselves to gender - being able to deal with them shouldn't be limited either.
"Language was invented for one reason, boys - to woo women.~*~*~Don't think it's all been done before
And in that endeavor, laziness will not do." ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~Don't think we're never gonna win this war
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I do have a cause, though.  It's obscenity.  I'm for it.  - Tom Lehrer~*~All you need is your beautiful heart
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DelightfullyMAD

Nothing wrong with those sorts of things.  Some of my fondest memories was cooking with my mom, and even now I enjoy helping her cook whenever I go to visit.  On the flip side, bonding time with dad was... him walking me through how stocks and investments work.  Not terribly riveting or exciting when you're 12 years old, but later in life I am actually very grateful to him that he introduced me to those concepts as early as he did.  So many people in my age group still have no clue about how much of the market or the economy in general works, so I am very grateful for that.
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Sara Nilsson

Quote from: Oniya on August 15, 2017, 08:39:18 PM
I will point out that teaching your son how to cook - or your daughter how to use tools - is something we could use a lot more of.  How to handle the equipment safely.  How to follow the instructions.  How to deal with mistakes/emergencies.  They don't need to go all Emeril LeGasse or Rosie the Riveter, but being able to 'do for' yourself in both arenas is very useful in those first years out on your own.  Flat tire in the middle of nowhere (and no cell reception)?  Need to stretch what's in your fridge until pay-day?  These sorts of situations don't restrict themselves to gender - being able to deal with them shouldn't be limited either.

I don't know how it is in the US, but in Sweden we kinda do in school (but need to do lots better). Everyone has to learn how to cook in home economics (I think the translation would be) and handling basic tools is taught in woodworking that all has to take same as all have to learn how to use needle and thread. Like you said, teaching kids how to change tires etc would be good. Goddess knows I changed mine plenty of times. Darn old beetle had a tendency to have blowouts.

Heck my mom can change tires and she is a tiny handicapped thing.

These are not boy/girl things, they are adult things and people should know them.

DelightfullyMAD

Absolutely.  I love to cook, and like I said, I've been helping my mom cook since almost as long as I've been able to walk.  Still have a burn mark from when I was like 5 when I accidentally touche the stove, actually.  Although, I do have to admit that learning to cook did allow me the ability to cook things that have not been good for my waist.  Baking brownies has something of a therapeutic effect for me, as it is the first thing I actually learned to make myself, but as the saying goes 'With Great Power Comes Great Responsibility'.

I guess my thing is that I have something of an issue with toying around with children's development.  It's a personal sticking point for me, and I will readily admit that, and I will also admit that progress can't be made without at least some experimentation, but I still have something of a base response when I hear about cases of more extreme parenting methods.  My mind always goes to the worse case scenario, and I can't help but think 'what if that doesn't work?'  It's one thing when we are trying to come up with new methods of doing things where there is no real stakes, but the issue for me is that, where children are concerned, there is always a stake.  That does make things a bit complicated, I know, because sticking to the old tried-and-true isn't always for the best, but the risk involved in new ideas carries a great deal of possible damage.

One reason I have this hang up is that one of my cousins and her husband have taken to using such an experimental method of child raising.  They have opted to let their son just learn things at his own pace, and I do mean everything.  Long story short... he is now 6 years old, and still isn't potty trained.  It's left me a little hesitant in regards to experimental parenting.
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Oniya

Quote from: Sara Nilsson on August 15, 2017, 08:47:10 PM
I don't know how it is in the US, but in Sweden we kinda do in school (but need to do lots better). Everyone has to learn how to cook in home economics (I think the translation would be) and handling basic tools is taught in woodworking that all has to take same as all have to learn how to use needle and thread. Like you said, teaching kids how to change tires etc would be good. Goddess knows I changed mine plenty of times. Darn old beetle had a tendency to have blowouts.

Heck my mom can change tires and she is a tiny handicapped thing.

These are not boy/girl things, they are adult things and people should know them.

We used to have Home Economics in school (your translation was perfect, by the way) and while it was an elective class usually targeted at the girls, there were boys that chose to take the class as well.  Same with both wood and metal shop.  I can operate a sewing machine, a belt sander, a band saw and an oxy-acetylene torch if I need to.  Sadly, many places have cut these classes due to budgets, and it's left to the parents (many of whom don't have time to teach these skills, especially when both parents work.)  We've made a point of teaching Little Oni the basics, but I wonder about some of the kids in her school not having these sorts of skills.

(EDIT to note Mad's last post)

I'm assuming home-schooled?  Purely because the kindergartens I've encountered require that the kids be toilet trained.  Also, 'social pressures' tend to get kids more enthused about not wearing diapers.
"Language was invented for one reason, boys - to woo women.~*~*~Don't think it's all been done before
And in that endeavor, laziness will not do." ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~Don't think we're never gonna win this war
Robin Williams-Dead Poets Society ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~Don't think your world's gonna fall apart
I do have a cause, though.  It's obscenity.  I'm for it.  - Tom Lehrer~*~All you need is your beautiful heart
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DelightfullyMAD

Yep, home schooled, nail on the head.  If he had been going to kindergarten and elementary, then certainly social pressures would have taken place.  Even then though, the initial humiliation would have likely been quite traumatic, and not something I'd wish on a child.

To their credit, they are becoming aware that they are going to have to take steps to properly teach him, as several other members of the family have called them out, but the issue remains the same.
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Oniya

Just to be clear (since I realize it could be interpreted as such), it's not the 'home-schooling' aspect so much as the 'absence of classmates' aspect that came through there.  There are numerous home-schooling communities that provide the social interactions that are just as necessary to development as the 'book learning'.  (It also gives the parents a bit of a break every so often when the kids are together for a particular learning experience.)  Even without a traumatic humiliation, a child is going to notice that their compatriots are not requiring adult assistance in certain tasks and will want that type of independence as well - whether it's buttoning a sweater, tying their shoes, or using the restroom.
"Language was invented for one reason, boys - to woo women.~*~*~Don't think it's all been done before
And in that endeavor, laziness will not do." ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~Don't think we're never gonna win this war
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I do have a cause, though.  It's obscenity.  I'm for it.  - Tom Lehrer~*~All you need is your beautiful heart
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DelightfullyMAD

Yeah, that aspect is why they are having to reevaluate their methods.  The child has made inquiries into this subject themselves, so I do thankfully think that my cousin has gotten the point.

I mainly used that example to note why I have a certain degree of squeamishness when it comes to alternative parenting methods, having seen the results of it close up.  Of course, in a way, all parenting is unique, but much like a cliche, some methods have withstood the test of time for a reason.  Not to say that we can't try and improve and come up with new ideas, but I think some people want to veer way off the rails for it's own sake.
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Fury Aphrodisia

I've taken a little while to stew about this, and I'm afraid my position hasn't changed much.

As parents, it's our JOB to influence a child's development. Everything you do in terms of raising a child is experimental. Yes, it carries with it the chance to do damage: This is why parenting is such a big responsibility. But there is no safe alternative. Not a single one. Because children are not universally the same, there is no universally-applicable parenting method. "What if that doesn't work" is often repeated as a concern for parents, with mother's in particular falling prey to the phenomenon known as "mom guilt." To be clear, dads and other caregivers go through it too. The process of dissecting every small decision from "Did I make him wash his hands in water that was warm enough?" to "What if she remembers in twenty years that I made her eat her strawberries and it's traumatized her?"

It comes from every small decision, and everything you learn about your children along the way determines how you adjust to what that specific child needs for themselves. The process of raising my first son and the process of raising my second son is a lot different. What requires direct conversation with my oldest, a thorough explanation of why what he's done is unacceptable or necessary (as applicable) is needed before he can modify future behaviour. The youngest, however, will throw things, hit me and scream his tiny little growl in my face, so it's necessary to simply pick him up and move him to let him know that trying to throw down a challenge to mommy won't get him what he wants.

Do I wonder if forcing him to submit to my need to change his diaper might build in him a rebellious nature? You betcha. But I can't just ask him to let me change it like I did with his brother at that age. So, I've had to modify how I do things, modify what I do.

But conversely, what we're talking about here isn't experimental. It's literally stripping away all the experimental crap and letting them just play with whatever they want. I can't understand what's so experimental about not forcing them to restrict their imaginations and their ideas of what is acceptable for them based on their gender. This is concerning to me because it insinuates that the default position is to lock them in boxes from a young age until all they know is what we've allowed of them based on an arbitrary genetic expression.

So, in summary, everything a parent does is experimental. Except this. How did we come to a place where letting kids play with whatever age-appropriate toys they want is a partisan, controversial issue?
Fire and Flora - My Ons and Offs  - Updated May 17th '17 ---- Aphrodisia Acedia - (A&A's) - Updated September 9th '17 ---- Sinful Inspirations - Story Ideas - Updated May 17th '17

~I am not the voice of reason: I am the voice of truth. I do not fall gently on hopeful ears. I am strident and abrasive. I do not bend to the convenience of comfort. I am unyeilding. I do not change with wind and whim, but am always standing, unchanging, steady, constant and persevering. You rebuke me when you need me most, yet still I fight. The enemies of truth are everywhere. But I am not defeated.~

Lustful Bride

Funnily enough I was just watching a video on the matter.
Its funny but has a few good points.

Spoiler: Click to Show/Hide

Remiel

I'd definitely like to see the experiment carried out, but in a framework that is devoid of all agendas or biases.  In other words, I would have an isolated group of children in which traditional gender roles were implicitly or explicitly reinforced, and another group in which traditional gender roles were undermined.  For example, in the first group I would have two toy chests: one labelled "Boys" and the other "Girls."  The "Boys" chest would contain traditional male toys such as cars, toy soldiers, and so on, while the "Girls" chest would contain dolls and similar things.  The second group would have the same two chests, but the labels would be switched.  Or perhaps there could even be a third group who would have just one big chest with no label.

To ensure a fair experiment, I would make sure to bring the parents in on it (for, as Oniya pointed out, it undermines the experiment if children are subject to one set of influences at school and another at home).  As for concerns about the children being "lab rats", I would assume that the experiment would conform to all acceptable ethical guidelines (e.g. don't intentionally create a situation where children can be bullied, and intervene if you notice bullying happening), be transparent to the parents, and subject to peer review.

It would be very interesting to compare the two groups after some period of time to see what effect, if any, the influences had on aggressive behavior, self-confidence, and relationships with their peers.

In any event, I would watch that show.

Fury Aphrodisia

Remiel making a reality science show with kids.  :D

That said, you might get better results if the children were in a "boarding school" sort of a situation, removing parental influence while maintaining the ability to monitor the children, as much for the parents' peace of mind as anything else.
Fire and Flora - My Ons and Offs  - Updated May 17th '17 ---- Aphrodisia Acedia - (A&A's) - Updated September 9th '17 ---- Sinful Inspirations - Story Ideas - Updated May 17th '17

~I am not the voice of reason: I am the voice of truth. I do not fall gently on hopeful ears. I am strident and abrasive. I do not bend to the convenience of comfort. I am unyeilding. I do not change with wind and whim, but am always standing, unchanging, steady, constant and persevering. You rebuke me when you need me most, yet still I fight. The enemies of truth are everywhere. But I am not defeated.~

Mera1506

Quote from: SidheLady on August 08, 2017, 04:54:18 PM
So, I saw an advert this afternoon for a TV program, associated with this article

http://www.bbc.co.uk/mediacentre/proginfo/2017/33/no-more-boys-and-girls

I am fundamentally opposed to this kind of treatment, simply because we are different, there are neurological and biological differences between the genders.

Worse than this, I think teaching it to children is wrong, because they wont teach them anything else, just...this fallacy.

I am going to try and watch the program, but I fear it will be incredibly biased and wont look at other possible reasons for these differences, such as personal choices or situations, and heralds something horrible for our children

Please note, I am completely pro-equality of opportunity, I deeply believe that everyone has the right to try and do whatever they want, but, it must be accepted that not everyone will want to do everything.

I'm so sick and tired of politics being pushed on little kids, let them be kids, please. If you want to promote treating people equally you don't need politics. But just the treat others as you would like them to treat you.
stop denying basic human biology, boys and girls are hardwired differently from birth and these people seem to think that's wrong for some reason. It's not wrong at all, it's called evolution. When babies one day old are tested to see if they look more at an object or a face and the boys for the vast majority look far more at the object and the girls far more at the face it cannot be socialisation.
It translates to women dominating fields that are based on working with people and animals as men dominate fields that is more object centered, like engineering.
But apparently pushing politics on children while denying basic human biology is OK these days.

Oniya

Might want to look up people like Helen Blanchard, Edith Clarke, Esther Conwell and Grace Hopper.

Also Hedy Lamarr, Sophie Germain and Vera Rubin
"Language was invented for one reason, boys - to woo women.~*~*~Don't think it's all been done before
And in that endeavor, laziness will not do." ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~Don't think we're never gonna win this war
Robin Williams-Dead Poets Society ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~Don't think your world's gonna fall apart
I do have a cause, though.  It's obscenity.  I'm for it.  - Tom Lehrer~*~All you need is your beautiful heart
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Oniya

And this lady, who (among other things) was the chief engineer on the Hawker Hurricane that helped win the Battle of Britain.
"Language was invented for one reason, boys - to woo women.~*~*~Don't think it's all been done before
And in that endeavor, laziness will not do." ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~Don't think we're never gonna win this war
Robin Williams-Dead Poets Society ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~Don't think your world's gonna fall apart
I do have a cause, though.  It's obscenity.  I'm for it.  - Tom Lehrer~*~All you need is your beautiful heart
O/O's Updated 5/11/21 - A/A's - Current Status! - Writing a novel - all draws for Fool of Fire up!
Requests updated March 17

HannibalBarca

Within any population there's drift.  I took enough psychology and statistics to know not everyone falls within three standard deviations from the norm.

I was a very healthy but lanky kid as a teen.  Even as a cis male, I would have had a very hard time qualifying as a firefighter--even with copious exercise, I just couldn't build the muscle mass.  But I knew girls who were more muscular than me without anywhere near the effort I put out to bulk up.  The women who qualify as firefighters may be a smaller number than the men who do, but there are still women who can qualify easier than some men.

The problem, Mera, is when certain individuals (often organized into groups within a culture) try to impress upon others their views on what people should and shouldn't do.  It can happen with groups from the Left, Middle, or Right...but I've found in my forty-nine years of sociological observation that conservatives do it a lot more than other groups, primarily because of their observed greater need to belong to an in-group, and conform to traditional standards.
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MisledBloodshed

Quote from: Mera1506 on June 18, 2018, 04:38:29 PM
I'm so sick and tired of politics being pushed on little kids, let them be kids, please. If you want to promote treating people equally you don't need politics. But just the treat others as you would like them to treat you.
stop denying basic human biology, boys and girls are hardwired differently from birth and these people seem to think that's wrong for some reason. It's not wrong at all, it's called evolution. When babies one day old are tested to see if they look more at an object or a face and the boys for the vast majority look far more at the object and the girls far more at the face it cannot be socialisation.
It translates to women dominating fields that are based on working with people and animals as men dominate fields that is more object centered, like engineering.
But apparently pushing politics on children while denying basic human biology is OK these days.

Even where there is differences between men and women that are biological there are a lot that very clearly aren't.

The whole pink/blue thing was basically nonexistent in the past, babies of both genders wore dresses for quite a while, high heel shoes were first designed for men, all that. There is so much that is entirely cultural which changes as culture changes. That's damn near as old as people.

No one wants to make kids all exactly the same, but the differences can't be neatly packaged into 'boy do this girl do that.' Gender roles actively hurt people who don't fit in them, so anything that reduces the severity of that impact is a plus in my book. If you really want to let kids be kids then let them be kids instead of boys or girls. Let them do what they want without getting sent home crying because they had the wrong colour backpack.

I don't have kids of my own but I do have a few small ones in my general area of influence and it's absolute bullcrap when i see them getting hurt because society decided that men can only have approximately 2 emotions. I see it regularly. I'm kinda mad about it.