but are all gender-based roles irrational stereotypes? I don't think so. What does psychology, if it's the basis for the movement, have to say about it? Isn't it psychology and neuroscience that showed us men and women brains operate differently. — TheMadFool
(my bold)The stereotypes are self-sustaining myth. People make the mistake of confusing their preferences for a notion/rule of where they belong. They walk away under the illusion to be of a preference means they must of a gender prescribed in a stereotype.
In the process, it forms an illusion that someone's preferences are being attack. Much as we've seen in this thread, where gender neutrality is mistaken for some notion of everyone being genderless and not having any sort of individual preference. — TheWillowOfDarkness
. https://www.ipsos.com/en/node/392831Among western countries, the United States is most likely to believe that transgender people have a mental illness (32%) and the most likely out of all countries surveyed to believe that transgendered people are committing a sin (32%). Americans are the most likely to say that society has gone too far in allowing people to dress and live as one sex even though they were born another (36%),
This is a misrepresentation of the debate we're having. Education is ideological one way or the other. Separating boys and girls is as ideological as mixing them; gender non-neutral schools are as ideological as gender-neutral schools. Getting kids to sing the national anthem at school is enforcing an ideology. Banning it in every school would be enforcing a different one. If your contention is that the prevailing ideology is not an ideology because you're blind to it then you're a classic victim of ideology. So, the debate we're having is about education policy, which changes all the time, and characterizing it as a novel attempt to put the government in charge of ideology and morality is just an attempt to wiggle out of the responsibility to actually think about the issues at hand. — Baden
That sounds good to me. But is it not also possible to discuss together why you each think your way is the best? — unenlightened
Well public education has to lean one way or another. It cannot be trying to be gender neutral and support gender stereotypes, and my guess is that you want it to go on with the way it is, which is enforcing government ideology, more or less by definition. If I was playing hard ball, I would suggest that gender neutrality as described is rather refraining from imposing an ideology of what character is appropriate to each sex. — unenlightened
So, the debate we're having is about education policy, which changes all the time, and characterizing it as a novel attempt to put the government in charge of ideology and morality is just an attempt to wiggle out of the responsibility to actually think about the issues at hand. — Baden
What are the schools doing now to enforce gender roles? — Hanover
The schools stop teaching the basic nuts and bolts about the world and decide their role is social engineering. — Hanover
I don't know. Do they have different uniform requirements, maybe? But roles can be supported without being enforced, by simply treating the genders differently. — unenlightened
That is ridiculously naive. Education has always been about social engineering, you are simply using it as a negative because it might engineer change. What do you think nuts and bolts are used for? — unenlightened
You need some perspective. If American culture is highly gendered and adversarial and the debate is overheated and ideological, then what would you call what would happen if you suggested Iran change their culture? There are far worse extremes in the treatment of women vs men in other cultures - differences that I would call unequal. American culture is one of the most open cultures on the planet. You seem to think that any questioning of your ideas is overheated and ideological (and silly).What I am wanting to contrast here is the American culture that seems to be highly gendered and gender prescriptive, and adversarial, with the playing down of gender differences in Sweden. It seems to me that the whole tone of the debate in the US is overheated and ideological, and is putting great pressure on folks to conform or else to rebel to an extreme. — unenlightened
I'm referencing the misuse of schools to teach a particular ideology. How does teaching math, for example, do that? — Hanover
by simply treating the genders differently. — unenlightened
Many of these behaviors are instilled in people before they get to grade school. It starts in the home. Your first few years of life are where you adopt your norms for the rest of your life... in a myriad of small ways, ignoring, ridiculing, one sex, and encouraging the other. By simply assuming that girls aren't usually as good at maths, or that they're not as interested, or that they won't need it, by not challenging such expressions when they are expressed by pupils. Again, one does not put the dominant ideology on the curriculum because it pervades the ethos of the school. One does not teach gender stereotypes because they pervade everything one teaches. Your maths question is silly, and I have given it far more notice than it deserves. — unenlightened
This is uncontroversial. No one is supportive of ignoring, ridiculing, and discouraging anyone, and no school I know of believes girls should be excluded from math class. So what is it that we're disagreeing about? I was assuming there'd be some rule in some administrative handbook that would be changed after we instituted our gender neutrality polices, but it doesn't sound like there is one.in a myriad of small ways, ignoring, ridiculing, one sex, and encouraging the other. By simply assuming that girls aren't usually as good at maths, or that they're not as interested, or that they won't need it, by not challenging such expressions when they are expressed by pupils. Again, one does not put the dominant ideology on the curriculum because it pervades the ethos of the school. One does not teach gender stereotypes because they pervade everything one teaches. Your maths question is silly, and I have given it far more notice than it deserves. — unenlightened
If you say so. My objection remains though, and I don't see how we'll change the math curriculum in a gender neutral society, not do I see how adding and subtracting numbers enforces gender bias. I get how excluding girls from such enterprises would, but I am opposed to such things.Your maths question is silly, and I have given it far more notice than it deserves. — unenlightened
I don't see how we'll change the math curriculum in a gender neutral society — Hanover
The schools stop teaching the basic nuts and bolts about the world and decide their role is social engineering. — Hanover
I'm not saying that gender-neutral schools are a bad thing. I'm saying that it shouldn't be pushed into all schools, just as I think a certain religious philosophy shouldn't be pushed in all schools. — Harry Hindu
That is what the free market system is for. Make it an option for parents to try or not. It shouldn't be a requirement or even experimented with in the public school system.So, who is your foil here? Who is saying that gender-neutral schools are necessarily and unqualifiedly a good thing? What your interlocutors are attempting is more like exploring the grounds on which the subject could be meaningfully debated. What we're getting back in return is an attempt to shut things down on the basis of buzzwords like "authoritarian socialism" etc. So, maybe they represent progress. Maybe not. Shouldn't we explore how we would find the answer to that question? — Baden
What un said, plus — Baden
About the first thing that's done when designing a curriculum is that the underlying ideological basis is decided on. You will be pained to know, I'm sure, that these days that is usually some form of liberal humanism (which is why teachers are not supposed to hit your kids, scream at them or force boring rote-learned work down their throats). — Baden
Nor does anyone else in the whole wide world. That's why it's so silly. — unenlightened
The only thing I've seen that's in need of change is how we are to let our kids play in preschool when they are 1 and 2 years old. — Hanover
I didn't see that bit where someone, anyone at all, said gender neutrality only applies to preschool. Remind me. — unenlightened
His link said nothing about Karl Marx. I think you and un, are the extremists here. When you find yourself in a hole, stop digging.Right, I see, so you thought this conversation was about teaching Karl Marx to toddlers. — Baden
Read it again. That was just an example he gave as to how we should handle teaching gender-neutrality to children. The fact of it's existence should be discussed and mentioned, but placing value judgements on political ideologies (gender-neutrality is part of a political ideology) is not what teachers should be doing, and I've already mentioned several times that your presumption of "gender" is wrong - which is why we have nonsensical discussions like this.Nobody is suggesting teaching socialism the subject as Hanover implied. — Baden
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