Kelly is a sophomore who attends a meeting of the all-male
robotics club. She says she has an interest in joining the club and
working on building a robot for an upcoming competition. The male
members of the club snicker at her and one boy puts his foot out
and “accidently” trips Kelly in the aisle. The male teacher in the
room tells the boys to settle down, but he also tells Kelly that he
isn’t sure she would have the necessary skills for the club, since
the other members have all had several years experience building
robots. “After all,” he said, “you were probably playing with dolls
for all the years these boys were building things and experimenting
with electronics.” John is an artistic, intelligent boy who is not
interested in sports or other “typical” male pursuits. He enjoys
writing fiction and poetry for the school newspaper. When he gets
on the school bus no one will share a seat with him. He ends up
standing and a group of students in the back of the bus harass and
heckle him, calling him homophobic slurs. In the teachers’ lounge,
a group of Caucasian teachers huddle around the water cooler
gossiping about why one of their fellow teachers, an Asian-American
woman, was promoted to assistant principle over other teachers with
more years of experience. “I know she has a master’s degree, but I
still think this is clearly an affirmative action thing—they just
want to get more minorities in administration. They don’t care
about who is really qualified, and that’s all there is to
it.”
Kelly is a sophomore who attends a meeting of the all-male robotics club. She says she has an interest in joining the club and working on building a robot for an upcoming competition. The male members of the club snicker at her and one boy puts his foot o
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