[RUME] Proof and Prejudice: Women in Mathematics and Physics
lida-k-barrett at att.net
lida-k-barrett at att.net
Thu May 4 13:57:05 EDT 2006
As a 79 year old, as of the 21st of this month, I am delighted to hear things have changed, and I know they have though not totally. For a look at the 1940-1960 era see Margaret Murray's "Women Becoming Mathematicians" Lida
--
Lida K. Barrett
3407 Crown Point Road
Louisville, TN 37777-3331
865-984-6599
lida-k-barrett at att.net
-------------- Original message from "Crowley, Lillie F (Bluegrass)" <lillie.crowley at kctcs.edu>: --------------
> I'm a fifty-something in mathematics. In response to Sarah Natividad's comments
> about having never experienced any discrimination because she's female, I would
> suggest that a significant factor is that those battles have been fought for her
> by a lot of fifty-somethings...and sixty-somethings and forty-somethings...
>
> That's about all I am going to say, except to suggest that, should she decide to
> pursue a doctorate later after her children are older, she will find it MUCH,
> MUCH more difficult to do than she would have when she was in her twenties.
> There are two reasons for this (this is my opinion only, but based on personal
> experience...): first, she won't have the mental acuity in her forties that she
> did in her twenties, and will also have to re-learn much of the mathematics she
> learned in graduate school before she left; and incorporating graduate study
> into an already full and complicated life is a real challenge.
>
> Cheers, Lillie Crowley
>
> ________________________________
>
> From: rume-bounces at betterfilecabinet.com on behalf of Murphy, TJ
> Sent: Tue 4/25/2006 8:21 AM
> To: Sarah Natividad; rume at betterfilecabinet.com
> Cc: tjmurphy at ou.edu
> Subject: Re: [RUME] Proof and Prejudice: Women in Mathematics and Physics
>
>
> Sarah,
>
> I suggest you read the book Why So Slow: The Advancement of Women by researcher
> Virginia Valian.
>
> Best wishes,
> Teri Murphy
>
> At 9:20 PM -0600 4/24/06, Sarah Natividad wrote:
>
> I'm a thirty-something-year-old woman and your mileage may vary, but I
> for one have never experienced prejudice in the mathematical world. No
> one has ever once said to me that I can't be as good at math because I'm
> female. I've always been hired for what's between my ears. I've never
> been treated more poorly than my male colleagues. I have been treated
> poorly on occasion, but mostly because I'm not so high up on the faculty
> food chain.
>
> Now you might argue that it's because I'm a woman that I'm so low on the
> faculty food chain, and you'd be right. I chose to stop at a Master's
> degree and be a Lecturer because it was a job I could do while raising
> children. But nobody made me choose that. Nobody told me I had to
> choose it because I was a woman. I just wanted to. Kids are important
> to me and I enjoy raising them. I saw my mom being pregnant at age 40
> and I knew that wasn't what I wanted. I wanted to have my kids earlier
> in my life, when my body was more capable of keeping up with them. And
> nobody's stopping me from going back to get my doctorate, if I so
> choose, whenever I'm ready.
>
> True, if I were a man, I would not have had to choose between kids and a
> fabulous career at the cutting edge of mathematics. I could have had
> the career first and the kids later, if I wanted, instead of choosing
> between kids-then-career or career-but-no-kids. But that has to do with
> biology. If you don't like it, you can take it up with God (or
> Evolution, take your pick), but it has nothing to do with the prejudice
> of our fellow human beings. If a man had as strong an interest in
> raising kids as I do, he wouldn't be able to pursue a fabulous career at
> the same time either. There are only so many things one can do at the
> same time.
>
> I'm not denying the facts, and I'm not saying there's never any
> discrimination. I'm just suggesting that some of the reasons why women
> earn less than men in mathematics, why women are not as highly
> represented, etc. could possibly be due not to prejudice, but to the
> fact that women are biologically different, and therefore are not able
> to be remedied by anti-discrimination policies or projects. There are
> undeniable biological differences between men and women, and these
> differences are bound to drive different sets of life choices. It's
> entirely possible that women can be just as good as men at mathematics,
> that their talent can be recognized (anyone who says women aren't as
> good at spatial relationships as men has obviously never seen a mother
> pick the left shoe out of a pile of shoes and put it on the left foot of
> a squirming toddler) and cultivated, and that women would still not be
> proportionally represented in professorships. You can offer them all
> the choices in the world, but you cannot make them choose what you want
> just because it makes your statistics look more symmetrical.
>
> Just my two cents on an issue that makes me want to get up on my soapbox
> every time I hear the old canards trotted out.
>
> Sarah Natividad
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Rume mailing list
> Rume at betterfilecabinet.com
> http://betterfilecabinet.com/mailman/listinfo/rume_betterfilecabinet.com
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> Rume mailing list
> Rume at betterfilecabinet.com
> http://betterfilecabinet.com/mailman/listinfo/rume_betterfilecabinet.com
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://betterfilecabinet.com/pipermail/rume_betterfilecabinet.com/attachments/20060504/ff1cdc9b/attachment-0002.htm>
More information about the Rume
mailing list