I just noticed that facebook uses what appears to be a male silhouette for “profile” to represent the generic user. Check out the icons for “requests” and “photos” too. I just think it’s interesting because it brings up a few points:
— is it easier to use a male image to represent generic consumers of a product?
— where else is stuff like this visible?
— does stuff like this actually matter?
Filed under identity sexism iphone
There are some really interesting things pointed out in this research. Here are the key points I took from the NYT’s summary:
- There is some sort of typecasting going on with the profession. The societal image of a professor is someone with a liberal bias, so it’s almost like a self-fulfilling prophecy: if you think about whether or not you don’t fit the typecasting and make that salient to yourself, the chances of you not aiming for that profession become lower.
- Similarly, I agree with the ideas of “fitting in”; once you find yourself in the field, you might begin to take on certain characteristics (as stereotypical as some may be) you see in the people around you. This kind of identity formation suits itself to a type of in-group “we’re in this field” v. out-group “you are not” idea, with an emphasis being placed on the characteristics and ideals that separate the two groups. Indeed, “choosing an occupation is part of fashioning an identity,” Mitchell L. Stevens, a Stanford education professor, states.
- I think it’s important to think about the fact that other professions are “politically typed”. Would some of the professions mentioned as being liberal-dominated (“journalism, art, fashion, social work, and therapy”) benefit from the different viewpoints and perspectives conservatives may be able to contribute? I could definitely see that being true for academia.
- The connection the authors make with the research interests and associations of sociology and liberal ideals is really interesting to me. I think the same could easily be true for my other undergraduate major, psychology.
- Speaking of psychology, I just really enjoy their methodology. Anecdotal data can often not be extrapolated to the general public.
- My own experience with the teachers and professors I’ve had over the years has led me to conclude that I’ve seen this at work. Also, I identify as a liberal and majored in psychology and music; I totally fit the bill. That’s really interesting.
Filed under college graduate school politics identity
Is this really the case? Maybe it’s just another example of praxis shock (read: the discrepancy between what a pre-service teacher thinks teaching will be like and what teaching actually is like) but this doesn’t fit any of the band or orchestra directors I’ve been able to work with. Maybe they’re just the exception to the rule, but now I’m kind of curious to see whether there’s any actual data that supports the idea that directors aren’t able to keep up their own instrument chops as well as they’d like to. I’ve read a bit on the teacher-musician identity dichotomy that some teachers feel exists (i.e., the idea that there’s a difference between being a music teacher and being a musician and one will have to focus on one at the expense of the other) and I plan on editing this post with a source later on to back this up, so I’m curious about this. Either way, I’d definitely not like this to be the case with myself if I end up going the ensemble director route (but, then again, that just could be my naïvety ;))
(from soyouwanttoteach.com)
Filed under band orchestra praxis shock identity