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Fall 2015, Page 14

Sex, Math and Science

Worldwide attention, especially from females, turned to Marissa Mayer when she announced in early September 2015 that she only took 2-week maternity leave. Young women startled at her decision because the short leave is unusual for women after giving b…

Diligent Analysis of Sex Differences

alternatively titled: “How Many Discussions does it take to Challenge an Assumption?”
by Lillie Mucha

Elizabeth S. Spelke and Ariel D. Grace respond to the debate over Lawrence Summers’ comments with a deep understanding of the assumptio…

Different Ways of Thinking (Camilli Blog 4)

I distinctly remember the first time I sat down to take an official SAT test. Water bottle and snack on the floor next to me, calculator under my chair, four perfectly sharpened pencils sitting neatly at the top of my desk. In all the superficial ways,…

Yang’s blog 4: debate never ends

What if I asked about your attitude toward Lawrence Summer’s address that women’s innate reasons cause their absence in science? Well, the issue has been debated again and again that even for the same argument, there are lots of different explanati…

Disproving Summer (Blog Chapter 4: Olivia Choe)

To all the ladies reading this blog: Save the energy/time and give up. We will have a better chance in succeeding in something we are actually good at than in something that we are forcing ourselves to believe is true. Instead of bothering to read thes…

If Only More People Knew

The fourth essay featured in the book, Why Aren’t There More Women in Science? is titled “Sex, Math, and Science” and is by Elizabeth S. Spelke and Ariel D. Grace. Spelke and Grace discuss three main points throughout their essay, sex differences…

Like a Girl

In “Sex, Math, and Science,” Elizabeth Spelke and Ariel Grace claim that there are no differences between the mathematical abilities of men and women; however, there are gender schemas that discourage women from joining the field. When I was a chi…

Baby Bias

Elizabeth Spelke and Ariel Grace analyze the factors claimed by Harvard University’s president, Lawrence Summers, to account for the underrepresentation of women in the STEM fields in their essay “Sex, Math, and Science.” They provide research to…

Sex, Math, and Science – Blog Post 4 Rachel Tang

The most famous and controversial opinion of why there are more men than women in the STEM field is from Harvard University’s former president, Lawrence Summers. Elizabeth S. Spelke and Ariel D. Grace’s essay “Sex, Math, and Science&#…