This is topic Style of writing in forum Open Discussions About Writing at Hatrack River Writers Workshop.


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Posted by cgamble (Member # 2009) on :
 
In my own work, i have always tended toward dramatic language reminiscent of gone with the wind era. During a discussion of a story i have written, I have found instances where some people ( oddly enough males so far ), have found my writting overly "flowered". I have seen ( from here and other places ) women had the opposite comments. I was wandering if there does exist a gender bias toward or against certain types of writting.

If you are curious, I have a sample or two under fragments -> titles the good neighbor or my web site at http://www.christophergamble.com

Thanks,
 


Posted by djvdakota (Member # 2002) on :
 
There has to be a gender bias. I mean, look at us. I don't care what the feminists have been saying for the past fifty years, men and women ARE different. Let's compare reading likes with driving styles. You're going on a vacation. Dad wants to just GET there. Mom wants to stop at all the historic sites along the way. Shopping. Dad wants to take his list, get what's on it, get the @$#%& out. Mom browses, window shops, compares prices. I've been reading a lot of short stories lately. While some people seem picky on the subject, there are sure a lot of SFF writers who use old-fashioned, flowery language and are making moeney at it. Go with what you feel comfortable with, but keep in mind, you'll have to sell to someone who likes that same style. So don't go overboard to the point that you limit your market. If the editor you're sending a manuscript to is a guy...


 


Posted by Christine (Member # 1646) on :
 
What a strange thought. Actually, I agree that men and women have their differences, but I'm not sure it's in writing style preferences. I'd have to see a little more of what you mean, and I'd definitely want to see some proof. (In the form of a study...men/women....likes/dislikes.) It would actually be pretty simle to set up some preliminary findings. Come up with some examples of what you mean...come up with a couple authors with wildly different styles and ask people to state their gender and preference. (for those gender-neutral aliases out there)

As for shopping....I hate it when people think all women like to shop! I HATE SHOPPING! I'm not a tomboy either. I don't like spoits much, I'm not that steretype either. I just want to get in, get what I need, and get out with minimal fuss. I'd rather be playing cards or writing than shopping.

[This message has been edited by Christine (edited May 06, 2004).]
 


Posted by djvdakota (Member # 2002) on :
 
No offense meant, Christine. I'm not big on stereotypes either. And I'm no shopping lover. In fact, I hate it. And I'm the "Let's just get there!" person, while my husband is the one who likes to stop at all the scenic views. But am I a typical woman? What is the typical woman who is going to pick my book up off the shelf? Judging by the sales of romance novels there is a reader 'stereotype.' And as writers (especially if we want to sell enough books to make something like a living), I think we need to keep audience in mind when we write. It would be wonderful if I could write whatever is in my heart and guarantee that it will find a publisher and an audience. If we want to sell our short story to a publication, we had darned well better send them something the editor is going to latch on to. Otherwise, kiss those dreams of a writing career goodbye.
Romance novelists write for their audience. Some writers begin their careers writing fluff pieces just to get their names out there and their words in print. SF writers write for their audience also. And if a SF writer writes something that the typical woman will love, but the typical guy will hate, he then further eliminates more potential audience. In closing, a writer's style doesn't matter at all--as long as he isn't all that concerned with getting published.

PLEASE!! Correct me if I'm wrong. I'd really like to still hold out hope that my book will someday sell.


 


Posted by Gen (Member # 1868) on :
 
In the SF stories that women will love, well, if you mean romance I'd point out Sharon Lee and Steve Miller; Catherine Asaro; Mercedes Lackey; Anne McCaffrey... and in fantasy, Harlequin just founded an imprint, Luna, that publishes fantasy with a strong romantic component.

As for gendered prose, supposedly there are some differences, but they don't have to do with flowery-- rather with the focus on relationships versus the focus on descriptions/objects. Want to find out if you're male or female? Try the Gender Genie. You might be surprised.
 


Posted by Tracy (Member # 2015) on :
 
As a beginning writer I've been doing alot of reading, particular advice articles from published authors. One of the articles from Marion Zimmer Bradley mentioned that anyone who can create a coherent scentence can be a writer, if they follow the formula and write what the editor wants. As of a couple of years ago, women made up 40% of the SFF market, which means editors need be more aware of the gender bias issue you mention. In the last issue of Forum from the SFWA, there was an article and an ad that mentioned an emerging market that marries traditional romance novels to science fiction and fantasy. I could be wrong, but I took it to mean that at least some editors have realized that gender bias does exist and are striving to find something that appeals to everyone, the knight in shining armor rescuing the robotic woman trapped on a distance planet by the evil magic wielding step mother.
 
Posted by cgamble (Member # 2009) on :
 
Ok, I looked at gender genie, and gosh am i confused. I submitted several of my writtings, and my style shows up most often feminie.

Even the first paragraph of this text rates me higher on the female side!

Regardless, per my style, I have always been most comfortable communicating this way. I have changed my style when needed, but I want to get emotion from the situations I describe, even when the most emotion is simply the nod of understanding that the sky is blue.

Thank you all for your guidance and understanding..

[This message has been edited by cgamble (edited May 07, 2004).]
 


Posted by Phanto (Member # 1619) on :
 
You worry too much.

Write the story as best you can. If you use too much description, cut back. Don't worry yourself with gender issues in your writing.
 


Posted by sassenach (Member # 1725) on :
 
As much as I love "Mists of Avalon", Marion Z B has frequently said things about writing that are just plain bosh.

Anyway, the Gender Genie thinks I'm male--and that's after "analyzing" an essay I just wrote on adopting a dog. [But I'm not a male.]

[This message has been edited by sassenach (edited May 07, 2004).]
 


Posted by Lazarus Long (Member # 2008) on :
 
I would be interested to know the ages of the people, too.
I don't think its necessarily a gender issue.

I read the beginning of your (cgamble's) piece describing the wars that the dragons started, and I (a male) didn't find it overly flowery at all.

I couldn't find the fragments you mentioned, though. A link?
 


Posted by cgamble (Member # 2009) on :
 
Interesting point Lazarus. I do wander if there is a study to that extent..

And since you have read a few of the dragon story lines, I am open to any criticism you have the time to contribute...

As for the link that started this discussion and my own curiosity.

http://www.hatrack.com/forums/writers/forum/Forum11/HTML/000260.html

I'm off to research further the minds of those I want nothing more than to entertain.. or do i.. [evil laugh]

[This message has been edited by cgamble (edited May 07, 2004).]

[This message has been edited by cgamble (edited May 07, 2004).]
 


Posted by Tracy (Member # 2015) on :
 
The gender genie was interesting. When I did me first paragraph it came up as clearly male, but when I submitted the first several pages, the numbers were closer, though still clearly male.
Now, I am a female, but it looks like my writing doesn't resonate that way, at least according to the genie.
 
Posted by cgamble (Member # 2009) on :
 
It seems after everything I have heard from you fine people, that gender and age does not matter, and that our audience must then suffer from a standard personality set. Wouldnt that be interesting, if we could better identify the people we wanted to talk to, and bring them personally into the story --
 
Posted by Survivor (Member # 213) on :
 
Just tell the story. Your "style" doesn't matter as long as you know how to write coherently.

Do I worry about getting the right word? Avoiding "pet" usages and repetitive phrases? Finding sharp and evocative ways to say what I mean?

Of course. But none of that comes out of "style".
 


Posted by teddyrux (Member # 1595) on :
 
I agree with Survivor. Tell your story the best way you can. If you worry whether ot sounds too feminine or too masculine, you're not writing your best work. You're writing for some perceived market, and your work probably won't sell because you heart and soul weren't in it.

Rux
:}
 


Posted by Silver6 (Member # 1415) on :
 
Erm...for the gender genie, it's no wonder the results are so erratic: the keywords it is using for females include 'she', 'her', 'me', and for males 'said'.
A piece of dialogue ends up male. If the POV character is female, then you end up female. I know women are supposed to use more female character as their POV characters, but I don't think it's an absolute of writing.
I submitted two different bits of writing, and got two different results (and I do mean very different).
 
Posted by Ayla (Member # 2014) on :
 
Frankly I don't think there is a 'male' and 'female' style of writing. Everybody writes according to a way that they are comfortable with. In fact, people have a tendency to emulate authors that they admire. Hence our writing styles come from what we read.

For example, I'm a woman and I spent my childhood reading espionage novels (Robert Ludlum, anyone?) and hence my writing style is quite plain and 'male'. Every single piece of my writing that I submit to that Gender Genie comes back as 'male'. Silly stereotypes.
 


Posted by Survivor (Member # 213) on :
 
Yeah, someone should try putting some Andre Norton into that thing, see what comes out. She's the most masculinist writer I've ever read.
 
Posted by Lullaby Lady (Member # 1840) on :
 
I think the Gender Genie needs some more work!

My non-fiction piece was rated male, and my short story results came back as female...

We humans are much too complicated for that kind of "computer rubbish!"

~L.L.
 


Posted by Gen (Member # 1868) on :
 
Yeah, I never said it was accurate... Personally, on my fiction, things other people like come up female, and stuff nobody likes comes up male. I've never figured out why. Probably something to do with personal style, or the things I can write as convincingly interesting.
 
Posted by Survivor (Member # 213) on :
 
Well, you have to remember, it was written based on some work by a bunch of guys who looked at various historical authors and wrote a paper about how the women used certain words more than the men.

So we're already talking about a theory that would only be valid for deadies anyway. And only for the small sample of deadies they actually studied.

The have a link to some article explaining all this on the page. It clears up why the Gender Genie is so lame pretty quickly.
 


Posted by JBShearer (Member # 9434) on :
 
I have oft been accused (in my writing, not my posts here) of being rather flowery.

Could it be . . .

That because women's brains are more developed (on the average) toward language skills than mens? Possibly a little . . . or . . .

That women tend to read a little more literature?

I push all of my floweriness off on Dickens. I read TOO much Dickens. And Shakespeare. Old writers tend to be considered "flowery" because the speach isn't common modern vernacular.

I chalk it up to romantic stereotype. It is common knowledge (and quite true) that women enjoy romance novels. The romantic notions stemmed from chivalry, and romantic literary movements tended to be QUITE flowery and descriptive.

I say that women tend to read more flowery stuff. On the average they read less action (written from a quicker more modern styling) and more romance (tending toward the older styles). What you read gears you for what you write.

I don't know . . . yes . . . maybe . . . . . . .
 


Posted by Alias (Member # 1645) on :
 
I don't think it would be fair to say, "developed," as the reason. That connotes things I don't want to get into. But while we're at it, I think men are inherently better drivers than women , despite their tendency to take greater risks.

[This message has been edited by Alias (edited May 17, 2004).]

[This message has been edited by Alias (edited May 17, 2004).]
 


Posted by RFLong (Member # 1923) on :
 
And you thought the "developed" statement was courting trouble???

Hope there's a smilie missing after the driving statement!
 


Posted by Alias (Member # 1645) on :
 
Ha, missing indeed...
 
Posted by cgamble (Member # 2009) on :
 
What was once an attempt to understand the minds of my perspective audience has gone out of control. thats so sad.
 
Posted by wetwilly (Member # 1818) on :
 
Maybe we could say women tend to be more language-oriented and men are better with spatial stuff. That would explain why women are more often cool with flowery language, and men are better drivers. Makes sense to me, and men are DEFINITELY better drivers than women (said the man who wrecked his car half a dozen times in 2 years).
 
Posted by Alias (Member # 1645) on :
 
willy,

remind me sometime to give you a lecture on "Avoiding Unnecessary Detail That Counters Your Argument 101"
 


Posted by Survivor (Member # 213) on :
 
Males typically invest more in their driving ability. Far from making them safer drivers, this actually makes them more prone to do truly stupid things. The difference is that a man is usually aware that he is doing something stupid and dangerous and is doing it on purpose (I've fallen victim to this impulse myself). The felt danger is why men do these things.

Women, on the other hand, tend to avoid doing things that are particularly dangerous if they notice themselves doing them. But it also means that a woman going 90+ mph in a top heavy SUV is less likely to be aware that she is in any danger. Though a man doing the same thing will often grossly distort the risk (he wants to feel that it is very dangerous and think that it is actually quite safe--and has a similar dichotomy in how he wants various other people to perceive it), he is nonetheless aware of it.

If men weren't "better" drivers than most women, none of them would survive their first year of driving. But women could easily develop the same degree of reflexes and spatial awareness if they liked (look at the typical professional dance troupe if you think that men inherently have superior coordination or such). They just like not, in general.
 


Posted by srhowen (Member # 462) on :
 
that's ridiculous--and a stereo type. Why do you think men have to pay more for car insurance?

Men are not better drivers by default of being men. They have more accidents per capita then women do.

And as far as spatial things, well, I can back an 18 wheeler fully loaded cattle truck between two silos (about a foot of space on each side of the truck if that) with no problem--can you?

I really hate gender stereo types---truly do.

Oh and gender genie claims I am male.

Shawn

[This message has been edited by srhowen (edited May 21, 2004).]
 


Posted by Jules (Member # 1658) on :
 
quote:
it also means that a woman going 90+ mph in a top heavy SUV is less likely to be aware that she is in any danger.

quote:
Why do you think men have to pay more for car insurance?

Because the man's much more likely to be doing 90+ in an SUV to start with?

Besides, I don't think there's much wrong with stereotypes. Most of the time, there's at least a grain of truth in 'em.
 


Posted by Kolona (Member # 1438) on :
 
Actually, I think men are more likely to be doing 90+ parking a semi between silos.
 
Posted by Kolona (Member # 1438) on :
 
I read about a car company/dealership (?) that "took a chance" hiring women to drive their cars on and off the semi trailers. Now they prefer women because they've had far less dings and scrapes on the new cars.

Stereotyping? Maybe not. But there are differences even in driving between men and women. MHO is that the stereotypes of women as bad drivers is merely that difference as has been perceived by the male animal and subsequently embedded in the public subconscious. After all, men were the first drivers, basically, so they set the standard.

[This message has been edited by Kolona (edited May 21, 2004).]
 


Posted by punahougirl84 (Member # 1731) on :
 
Haha!

We don't have to like stereotypes, but there is a reason they exist as Jules mentioned. They can be used in writing for a quick effect when you just need a cardboard character for a few seconds or so in a scene. But then are we reinforcing the stereotypes? Probably.

The real problem is when they are used against us. I find it interesting that insurance companies can charge men more because they are MALE, which seems like discrimination. Apparently, there is some rule that allows them to use statistics to charge the way they do (just because more accidents are caused by males in general doesn't mean all males should be charged more, or all females less - start with a base cost and then charge based on your individual record). I wonder if it has ever been challenged in court? There are surely good male drivers (my husband is one) and poor female drivers (one of my sisters comes to mind). My dad's brother and wife have 4 kids - two female, two male. The girls both crashed into telephone poles not long after getting their licenses. I don't think the boys had those troubles. Of course, I remember dating a guy who trashed more cars than I'll ever own!

Any stereotype will have exceptions. We can use that in our writing too to great effect - like our loaded-semi-backing-between-silos gal Shawn (and I wouldn't even want to attempt it, but I have sailed a 28 foot boat backwards into a slip after making a 90 degree turn to port, then bringing her into the wind...) I realized late I could have been an engineer and might have liked it after discovering a talent understanding and manipulating spatial relationships.

My husband and I discovered we got identical combined SAT scores in high school. He's a software engineer, and I'm writing (and was teaching American History). So guess who got the higher math score, and who got the higher verbal score?

His verbal score was higher - probably from doing crossword puzzles. My dad got an 800 on the math score back when they didn't think it was possible and sent people from Princeton to find out he cheated (well, to check on him and a couple of others who got 800 on the verbal section). Based on stereotypes I should not have had the higher math score, but maybe genetics came in to play, regardless of my female status?

I submitted 3 pieces to Gender Genie. Two out of three were identified as being by a female author. I didn't bother to figure out why "the" is a male word and "and" is a female word.
 


Posted by Jules (Member # 1658) on :
 
My experience has always been that women tend to be better at maths, at least until you get to the highly abstract levels. If there's a stereotype that says otherwise, I don't know where it came from.

 
Posted by cvgurau (Member # 1345) on :
 
I submitted three times (one fiction, two nonfiction) and got a 2 out of 3 male rating. An interesting note: I keep a Story Journal, where I write problems with the story, but also with life in general. It's not a blog, because who'd want to read my petty thoughts? But that's not the interesting part. I submitted the two nonfiction segments from different parts of this journal, and gone a 1 out of 2 male answer.

Weird.

CVG
 


Posted by cgamble (Member # 2009) on :
 
ive read through this entire thread, and actually have a conclusion. the gender genie is broken ! no, just kidding..

i think there is a good stereo type that can be applied, but only because "most" people teach their children to follow these stereo types, which is then enforced through school and friends etc. it has nothing to do with skill or aptitude, but merely prefernces that are embeded in each of us as we learn who we are.. if this is true, you could probably craft your speech and writting such that you could better reach your audience by merely being cognisant of their ingrained choices and the fact that we know a part of their lifestyle simply because they are in (a book store in the fantasy or science fiction section)..

now if i can find the passion to actually write one of these stories...
 


Posted by Eric Sherman (Member # 2007) on :
 
I think the Gender Genie is really dumb. It uses certain keywords to determine gender? Then it could depend on sooo many things besides gender. POV, what voice yoru writing in, etc.

Certainly not reliable or scientific.
 


Posted by EricJamesStone (Member # 1681) on :
 
OK, a little background on the scientific basis of the Gender Genie.

First -- it does not claim to be 100% reliable. When analyzing entire books, the algorithm had an accuracy rate of 80%.

It works based on probablities. Certain words will tend to be used more by one sex or the other when writing. The larger the sample of writing, the more likely that those trends will show up. That's why working with entire novels is likely to yield more accurate results than paragraphs, short stories or chapters.

Choices such as POV or voice may influence the ocurrence of certain words -- writing in first person will probably result in more uses of the words "me" and "myself," for example, but those words have low point value in the algorithm. (And maybe women are more likely to write in first person?)
 


Posted by Alias (Member # 1645) on :
 
Coincidence or not ... I can't really say, but I recall being in high school and as I advanced through the harder sciences the numbers of females dwindled. In chemistry the ratio was 1 female to every 2 guys, in AP Chem it was 1 to 4, and in AP Physics it was a class of ten men, and no women at all.

I think women aren't as prone to be lazy as men. But I also think when the cards are on the tabel, in general, men are better at "being on their feet" and dealing with things.

Ex: (according to several teachers I've had) "We always like to have girls in the class because tehy always do the homework, and try. While the guys are lethargic, and more often don't pay attention in class than the girls. BUt when it comes to teh test daye statistically the guys outscore the girls."

It's not an issue of inherent superiority/ingferiority, but I think (in general) there are "fields" that exist, in whcih your gender may give you an advantage or disadvantage.

After all, all people are created equal BUT that doesn't mean Einstein and Dr King Jr would always have the same test score. At the same time EInstein couldn't have been half the orator. Every person has their inclinations, and I think to an extent so does every gender.

I think it's stupid to not stereotype genders at all, for example: look at play habits of young boys and young girls. While the girls are playing with the dolls, the boys are beating each other wioth sticks. It's not random, it's inherent.

Again, the balance can and does still exist even when not everything for both genders is the exact same.

Does anyone follow me, or am I rambling too much?
 


Posted by Phanto (Member # 1619) on :
 
There's nothing inherently wrong with sterotypes.

It's how they're applied. It's how they're reinforced. It's how they ruin peoples' lives, destroying their dreams and hopes.

That's what matters.

So what if 60% of group A exhibits characteristic 1? Or even it is 90%?

No, sterotypes aren't bad by themselves. That doesn't mean we don't have to understand them, extract the good in them, and treat every person as an individual.

*end rant*


 


Posted by rickfisher (Member # 1214) on :
 
quote:
Ex: (according to several teachers I've had) "We always like to have girls in the class because tehy always do the homework, and try. While the guys are lethargic, and more often don't pay attention in class than the girls. BUt when it comes to teh test daye statistically the guys outscore the girls."
My fourteen-year old daughter just finished her fourth college physics course. She was definitely the smartest kid in her classes (actually, the smartest person), and scored great on the tests. But she didn't pay attention "when it wasn't useful. Which was most of the time. In fact it was almost all the time." And the only reason she did as much homework as she did (which wasn't nearly all of it) was because it counted a lot toward the grade, and she does want to continue taking these courses.

Now, I'm just starting to teach her how to drive. So, what should I expect?
 


Posted by Kathleen Dalton Woodbury (Member # 59) on :
 
Expect her to act like a teenager, Rick.

I'd recommend that you encourage her to think about the physics involved as she drives. When I have taught physics, one of the things I make a point of discussing with the students is why rollovers happen, and what they can do to prevent a rollover when they are driving.

I figure if they don't come out of physics knowing anything else, then at least there's a chance I've saved a life or two.
 


Posted by Survivor (Member # 213) on :
 
Depends on her risk taking behavior. Some kids are low risk takers. They'll do things behind the wheel that make you cringe, with you sitting right there. But they won't go out and take stupid risks when you aren't looking.

Others are risk takers. They drive like little angels when you're there, but the moment you're not looking they turn into the spawn of Evil Kenievel.

Boys have more of the chemicals that drive most risk taking behavior. But girls that define themselves as risk takers will actually compete to take more risks than the boys.

Where do brains come into it?

Nowhere. Academic behaviors like studying hard and planning your future tend to predict lower risk taking, as does being a girl. Disregarding the homework load for a strictly optional series of classes also doesn't make any list of factors I can think up off the top of my head.
 


Posted by Gen (Member # 1868) on :
 
Having taken physics and math and hard science at the college level, gender does come into it-- but not where you think it would. (And I'm female. Just realized I should confirm that. ) I don't think it has anything to do with inherent ability. It has everything to do with how willing you are to put up with the guys, how able you are to become one of them. (And the ratio of girls to guys is terrible and only gets worse as you go on.)

Before this gets slammed, I've had a lot of experience being the only girl. It's hard. One of the reasons I loved earth science so much after the switch (although not the reason I switched) was because the guys there totally ignored gender. There's no stereotype about girls being bad in geology, and geologists are pretty laid back, so we were just another member of the class. Geology doesn't have anything near the competition you have in physics, and I'd argue it makes the entire discipline stronger. And it's not that I haven't spent as much time with geologists-- heck, for field camp we were all camping out or bunking in the same room. And gender just never came into it as relevant, never made a difference in who got treated how. They recognized you as female the same way they recognized you as, say, using a lot of sunscreen: part of the way you were, but, y'know, it's the rocks that matter. (I love geologists.)

In physics, the guys would stare if you answered a question. If you wanted to talk in a problem set group, you have to do what the guys did-- stand up, physically grab the chalk, and start yelling. (Think I'm kidding? I did that a few times. Doesn't make guys think well of you, since it's MALE behavior.) It's not that they're being unfair, it's that they're treating you like one of them, and girls aren't supposed to be guys, so they resent that or something. I've never fully worked this one out.

There's another argument I'd also make-- stereotype threat. When African American students are asked their race on a test, their performance goes down. Ditto when they're told it's a test of intellectual ability: both of these activate the bad at taking tests stereotype. Same thing happens for women and math. The really interesting one is giving math tests to Asian women, who have the "Asians are good at math" and the "women are bad at math" stereotypes. When you ask their race, their scores go up. When you ask their gender, their scores go down.

This is getting long... My favorite physics boy story: My freshman year, I went to an introductory picnic, and went to stand with a bunch of guys I vaguely knew who were talking about a problem set in advanced intro physics (I was in the medium class, since I hadn't had AP physics). Naturally, they were arguing about a problem set, rather loudly. Each one would take turns darting forward and yelling about it, until the rest of the group shouted them down. Finally, one of the two guys standing next to me said something that the rest of them grudgingly agreed with. The triumphant victor of a guy then turned to me and *put his arm around me*. Spoils of war.
 


Posted by punahougirl84 (Member # 1731) on :
 
Great story and post, Gen! I hope you demonstrated an "equal but opposite reaction" on that guy!
 
Posted by Survivor (Member # 213) on :
 
Girls do that to guys too, you know. The spoils of war thing, I mean. It's...I don't do that, myself.

The cunning thing to do would have been to point out that they were all wrong to agree with him (whether or not it was true).

The gracious thing to do would have been to accept the gesture as flattery.

But I'm guessing you did what I do and just sort of stood there feeling awkward and conspicuous.
 


Posted by Gen (Member # 1868) on :
 
er... uh. Well, I actually went out with him. Although, in my defense, only once. Once he'd freaked out because I worked out a relativity problem intuitively (I mostly stink at physics, but twin problems make a surprising amount of sense) I pretty much realized there wasn't any hope there. (I really do love geology. Geology guys get psyched when something works out, and they get all excited and impressed if you can go under a theotolite tripod at the top of a sand dune without disturbing the balance. I think that's the closest geology equivalent to twin problems.)

This story was one of the reasons, a couple years later, for my proposal to the department undergrad guy to spend funds hiring supermodel girlfriends for the male physics majors. Fun for them, and a lot less pressure on the female physics majors. Sadly, the department chose not to go that direction....
 


Posted by Survivor (Member # 213) on :
 
Ah, the gracious approach. I envy you.
 
Posted by Alias (Member # 1645) on :
 
Gen and puna,

I think I need to clarify something. I'm not sexist, I'm merely giving observations, I think that much should be clear. So very relatively speaking from my very limited point of view, I would make the following statement:

Men drift toward the hard sciences more than women do.

You may draw whatever conclusion you would like from that. I'm not suggesting they are less capable, but I am suggesting there may be an inherent factor based on gender that influences this. Maybe the female psyche is less inclined to find interest or motivation to apply itself to such fields, maybe the male psyche interprets things with clear-cut definition while the female takes thing in that are more vague and deep. Neither is better than the other but I would infer that for mathematics (which is the core of all hard sciences) it is easier to work with when thinking with clearer definition.

I personally believe that's the reason why women tend to be more "flowery" writers, and often produce thinkers and writers like Emily Dickinson while men produce Albert Einstein, Isaac Newton, and Steven Hawking.

But just because I believe that doesn't make it true, and I can admit that. So I'm not sexist. Of course you never said I was, but I got the impression that you were offended by my comment. APologies if that was the case, hope this clears my view up some more. And if it does and you're still offended, well, apologies--but that's as far as I can go.


 


Posted by Christine (Member # 1646) on :
 
Here's another hard fact you might want to consider, everyone:

Women tend to be verbal learners; men tend to be visual.

Speaking as a woman who not only excelled in math and science in high school, but also went on to study computer science in college, I can tell you something true: Men predominate sciences. In my opnion, this begets itself.

Let me explain: How are math and science taught? I'll give you a hint, it isn't verbal. Ahh, you say, but that's the nature of math and science...but is it? I've seen studies done in which women are taught separately from men in math...and you know what happens...they begin to excel! These studies are soon squashed because idiot women think it's sexist, but just enough information has poked through that I have hope, and I wish the idiots would shut up and go away so we can see more evidence.

Math and science can be taught in les visual ways...they just are't. These courses are taught by men for men. And a combination of societal and peer pressures keep women from even esriously considering these fields.

I'm not a feminist. I'm a rationalist. And the two observations I've made about this entire subject are: 1.) We can't even study it because of idiot feminists who think the whole concept is sexist when in reality a study of the differences between men and omen is far more likely to accelerate women ahead in society. 2.) Without these studies making any asertions about the differences between men and women is supposition and irrelevant.
 


Posted by Gen (Member # 1868) on :
 
Excellent point, Christine. I'd add that the guys in the hard sciences, as a general trend, tend to react to females by ignoring them (at best) or, in the worst case but not unusual scenarios, by tearing them down for daring to come into a male precint. If we keep thinking of the hard sciences as a place guys tend to go towards, it's only going to stay that way. (I also think a lot of the gender stuff is related to departmental/discipline culture, given my vastly more pleasant experiences in geology, which is after all a hard science.)
 
Posted by Silver6 (Member # 1415) on :
 
I agree. I'm in an engineering school where there's a ratio of 5:1 in favour of guys. Not that bad, you'd say. But all you have to do is look at the number of people in each field, and it gets funnier...In computer science, I believe there are seven or so girls for 160 students. Some of the other students take the approach that I'm nice to talk to about trivial subjects, but that I can't possibly be able to understand what the man at the blackboard is talking about.

And my teachers tend to have the approach: 'they're girls, so they're hopeless'. I also had a (male) teacher who picked on me routinely because I was the only girl in the group he was tutoring.
I hate that kind of attitude...
 
Posted by Gen (Member # 1868) on :
 
The guy I really loved: the college recruiter (from a shall-remain-nameless school) who told me I, as a girl, "would be way happier at a campus like ours where there's other girls around in the humanities than at one of those techy schools" when I told him I was interested in MIT as well as his school. So it's maybe true, yeah, but did he really think it'd make me more likely to go to his university?
 
Posted by MaryRobinette (Member # 1680) on :
 
Did this study also talk about the other forms of learning? Like kinetic?

Sorry, I'm a visual-kinetic learner. I'm a girl. People like me are the ones that get all touchy about having classes broken into boys and girls. I agree that not everyone learns the same, but having classes that target learning styles rather than gender would even the playing field in a lot of different areas.
 


Posted by Christine (Member # 1646) on :
 
Mary, I totally agree. I really do. I was only suggesting that doing some research about how to improve girls' math and science scores would be useful. And one way is to try to teach these classes in a more verbal and kinesthetic manner, but also, doing so would help *boys* who were the exception to that generalization I posted above.

I, for one, am a very verbal learner. I literally went to a friend of mine after a math class one time and told him just to tell me in words what the teacher had shown us in pictures that day, and then I got it! I struggled to interpret the textbook, and only made it through sheer force of will and determination. Also, because I'm stubborn as heck and if someone tells me I can't do something I'm ten times as likely to do it!

But yes, dividing based on learning styles would be far more effective than by gender, it was just, as I said, a suggestion for how to improve the stiuation for women. I'm not the only girl I know who complained. I went ot an engineering university, completely male-dominated, and my girlfriends, generally speaking, either were exceptions to the verbal learning style for omen rule or wre just as stubborn and determined as I was. The others transferred to liberal arts schools by the end of the first year.
 


Posted by MaryRobinette (Member # 1680) on :
 
Sorry Christine, were my hackles showing?
 
Posted by Jules (Member # 1658) on :
 
I think the male/sciences thing is a result of Western culture. Christine's point about women being taught separately is a very good one.

I studied CS at a university (Warwick) which attracts a large percentage of far-eastern and african students, so I got to see a lot of interesting things about different cultures

The gender split was very interesting; of about 70 european students in my year, there was only 1 woman. African, the split was a little less exaggerated, I think it was probably 20 - 3 or something like that; far-eastern was even less remarkable. 40-15 or so.

Of course, I see CS as primarily linguistic in nature anyway, and consider that studying a foreign language in place of the science that would normally be recommended for future CS students at A level was a very wise choice.

 


Posted by Survivor (Member # 213) on :
 
I think that boys tend to do better in classes with no girls around, too.

But there is a problem with segregated schooling...it implies that you need segregated workplaces too. Of course, this makes perfect sense, I think that it is silly we insist on trying to get men and women to work together.

But the fact remains, this is something our society insists upon. Whether or not it should is a different issue.
 


Posted by Eljay (Member # 1941) on :
 
I, for one, would have been miserable with segregated schooling. Right along, most of my friends were guys. If I had to choose, I tend to be a more visual learner (though choosing would be difficult; I do quite well with verbal things too).

Rather than separating people, which is only going to perpetuate prejudice in the long run, I think we'd do better to focus on making information accessible in a variety of ways. Almost everyone does better interacting with material in more than one modality.

People with different learning styles could be taught separately, but that also raises difficulties. I think the best way to handle it would be to educate teachers more fully about learning styles (and also learning disabilities--you'd never believe how ignorant most teachers are!). Of course, that demands a more ideal system of education--most teachers are also already terribly overworked.

As far as the issue of men and women not working together, I think of a Saudi student who was in my sociology of ed class in grad school. When asked about gender roles, he mentioned some of the different careers men and women pursued in his country. When asked about the possibility of a female mechanic, he said, "But where would she work? With men?" It effectively closes off a lot of options for anyone with non-stereotypical interests.

In spite of the statistical differences between males and females (and they do exist, and they do matter in the sense that it's important to know about them and address them), the fact is there's so much overlap, splitting things on a male/female basis is often not useful from a strictly learning point of view. Now, if we're talking about addressing social issues (e.g. distraction, showing off, peer pressure, etc.), splitting the sexes during early adolescence might be a very good idea. Of course, I'd favor some overall changes in our culture's attitudes instead...
 


Posted by Doc Brown (Member # 1118) on :
 
I teach engineering at the college and University level. Again this summer I will be teaching my class intended to inspire 12 and 13 year old girls to go into math, science, and engineering. This leads me to two questions:

1) Would one or more of the women here explain to me what you personally believe "verbal learner" means?

2) How in the world does this discussion keep going in the Writer's Workshops?
 


Posted by Survivor (Member # 213) on :
 
As writers, we are all teachers (of a sort). So there's that.

There is also the issue of writing convincing characters of different cultures and both sexes.

And then there's the fact that we all seem to like discussing this sort of thing endlessly.
 


Posted by Christine (Member # 1646) on :
 
Answering number one is quite a bit easier than number 2....I kind of ignored this thread for a while and when I came back (because it kept lighting up), we were talking about men and women in math and science. I can kinda see where that came from...

Anyway, verbal is spoken. Now, there is also a verbal/visual which involves the written word, and it is related, but studies have shown that combining verbal and verbal/visual modalities does not work. Basically, if you ask someone to read and listen to those words being spoken at the same time it doesn't add anything and they sort of interfere with each other. What does work, is to combine spoken words with pictures, to catch the learning styles of many people and to help make the words more meaningful. Also, in this way students are using both their occipital and temporal lobes to bring in the information, processing it in two different ways.

In math and science, in particular, the best thing is not to talk in equations. This amounts to verbalizing visual information, which does not give anyone another mode to learn it in. If you are explaining limits in Calculus, for example. Try to find a couple different ways to explain it. (Limits hung me up for the longest time because they kept talking in deltas and epsilons and I had no idea what that meant!) Explain that delta is change, but really explain it, don't gloss over the subject that is the crux of the issue (Like some Calculus teachers I knew...). Write, somewhere on the board, delta (go ahead and use the greek symbol, I'm just too lazy to go find it on my symbol thingy) = change. Tell them what kind of change you are referring to in this case, and show them how this change gets smaller and smaller. (You can and should use the graph as well, bot showing and telling always works best no matter what your learning style.)
 


Posted by cgamble (Member # 2009) on :
 
The problem is that the way you communicate to your audience is different that the way you create characters.

You can describe the same attributes of a character in a way that would "peak" the interest of the typical western male reader, but bore the typical western female reader. certainly there is a happy medium, which i think may be found in slightly more vague writting..

so, there really is a point to all of this..

that said, schools should be seperated by learning style, but work should not. i dont know about everyone elses jobs, but i was under the impression that doing a job meant far more regurgitation than learning -- not that learning is not involved, its just that it is rarely the goal of a job.... ..
 


Posted by Doc Brown (Member # 1118) on :
 
Thanks, Survivor and Christine.

On the subject of writing: my perception is that most readers and writers of comic books and graphic novels are male. I had previously assumed the reason was related to the subject matter, but now find myself wondering if the medium itself is more appealing to the male brain than the female. Interesting.

On learning: my experience is that most girls who begin an engineering program finish it. They are able to learn the material and succeed. The problem is attracting them to the field in the first place. That is the purpose of my Engineering Summer Camp for Girls.

In my camp, I don't care if the girls learn anything or not. My goal is to help them enjoy engineering through the same sorts of hands-on activities that boys experience: they build and program robots using Legos.

I do talk to them about engineering concepts like force, torque, tension, power, friction, etc. I do this to help them realize that they are employing these concepts in the robots they design and build. Perhaps I should enhance these discussions, relying more on conversation and less on diagrams. Hmmm...

FYI in the past I have done the same class for both boys and girls. I tell them about an engineering concept (e.g. friction) and assign them a challenge (e.g. build a machine that can drive up a steep hill without sliding backwards) and give them a Lego "cookbook" of sample robot designs.

As a rule, the boys are much more creative. They will dive right in and come up with all sorts of outlandish contraptions. About 80% of the boys ignore the cookbook and come up with their own "Rube Goldberg" designs, even though a few don't work. They would rather fail than follow a recipe. I don't know why.

In contrast, the girls always follow the cookbook, and I do mean always. They never even try to invent their own designs. I don't know why.

When it comes to competition time, the girls' cookbook designs usually look and perform almost identically, the race to the top of the hill is always very close. 100% of the girls robots make it to the top, and they do it in about 60 seconds.

The boys' Rube Goldberg designs always look very different from each other, and their performance is all over the map. The bad ones fall apart or get lost halfway up the hill, and the good ones are so fast I can barely time them. Only 20% of the boys robots make it to the top, but the ones that succeed get there in 15 seconds.

I assume the difference in their approaches comes from motivation, a subject strongly related to writing, but I could not explain it. Can any of you explain it?

Why are my boys more creative but less successful than my girls?
 


Posted by Kathleen Dalton Woodbury (Member # 59) on :
 
Possible answer to question 2:

As long as it doesn't turn into a flame war, I am willing to let this discussion go on.

As Survivor said, writers are teachers in a way.

Even more important, consider the fact that characterization is crucial to good story telling, and anything that can help writers of one sex better understand people of the opposite sex is worth exploring. After all, roughly half the people in the world are of the opposite sex. The better you understand them, how they learn, how they think, the better you may be able to communicate with them in your writing, and the better you may be able to characterize them in your stories.

Besides, I think it's interesting. <shrug>
 


Posted by Survivor (Member # 213) on :
 
Males and females have fundamentally different reproductive strategies, and that probably affects a lot of their innate psychology.

A biologically successful male human could potentially sire tens of thousands of children, a moderately unsuccessful male might sire none at all (a totally usuccessful male will manage to kill off his entire genomic clan in the process of being totally unsuccessful).

With females, on the other hand, the most biologically successful can't bear much more than twenty children, no matter what, and the least successful are fairly likely to bear at least a couple.

Of course, this is an extreme way of looking at the problem (and as such is inherently flawed in a number of important ways), but it does shed light on the issue of creativity v. certainty in male and female behavior. Human males have a reproductive strategy that is inherently more like that of insects or viruses (no moral comparison intended, insects are very good and viruses...well, I'm sure they do something or other). Females follow what we think of as the typical mammalian pattern, few offspring carefully nurtured. From a biological standpoint, males stand to benefit from huge payoffs by being creative. Females don't stand to gain as much from their own creativity (though they can gain considerable ground through their sons).

In point of fact, females not only stand to gain very little from their own creativity, they stand to lose a great deal if their daughters are too creative...which brings up something quite interesting.

Men and women are both biologically programmed to encourage their grandsons to push the limits while discouraging their granddaughters from stepping off the established path. But I've gone over this before.

Over the long term, there is absolutely nothing to be done about this tendency. You can fight it using cultural tools, but the fact remains that women that behave like men don't reproduce all that well...and neither do men that accept such behavior in their mates. Even if you don't accept that the genetics matter, the nurturing does, the grandparents that didn't encourage boys to be boys and girls to be girls will have few grandchildren to continue their value system.

The only solution is....
 


Posted by Gen (Member # 1868) on :
 
In addition to the cad strategy you outlined, Survivor, there's also the dad strategy (leading to the cad-dad breakdown people use to analyze everything from their dating life to classic literature). The cad is the player you mentioned; the dad is the nice guy who sticks around to see the kids raised healthy and successful and make *sure* they're his, as well as to get the initial mating opportunity. Which explains why men tend to be more upset about sexual infidelity, while women tend to be upset about emotional infidelity (since women need the additional child resources men provide).*

Additionally, I would say that reproductive strategies probably should not have a large impact on fields and subjects that didn't exist a thousand years ago, and part of the woman's role is culturally determined rather than genetically. (Eg, in India, people who fight for environmental justice are almost entirely female, while here we see a split. In France the top chefs are male, and respected for it.)

Has anyone else here read Sherri S. Tepper's _The Gate to Women's County_?

*From psych studies. Not talking from, you know, things I suspect. All from social psych.
 




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