(Yes, yes, I got even more
behind. I’ll catch up though. Eventually.)
My inspiration today is this
article. I thought it quite interesting. The article’s theory is that girls
are taught from an early age that intelligence/cleverness is an innate ability
that one does or doesn’t possess, while boys are taught that
intelligence/cleverness can be improved upon through focus and hard work. Because
of this, the article supposes that girls (specifically at the 5th
grade level) give up more easily when they come to an obstacle than boys do.
I, of course, had to think back to my 5th grade
experience. Most of my 5th grade memories aren’t academic—after all,
it was 1999 to 2000, so I mostly remember being worried that the end of times
was nigh. (Seriously, kid you not, the only thing that managed to quell my fear
was on New Year’s Eve when the year changed over in Asia and Australia, and I
thought, If it made it to 2000 there…)
I also have other memories from the year, also not related to my studies, like
the weight related one I touched on in this
post.
The one thing that really stands out from what I learned was
this poetry contest. Basically, my teacher had us each write a poem, and the
ones chosen would be entered into this anthology.
And I was just so confident about it. I remember thinking, I’ve got this in the bag. Yeah, I know—I was such a huge turd-nugget. Anyway, turns out I was right; my poem along with two others in my class were chosen to be put in the book [here’s the Amazon link of the edition I was in]. The book is somewhere at my parents’ house, because I’m pretty sure I didn’t bring it with me.
And I was just so confident about it. I remember thinking, I’ve got this in the bag. Yeah, I know—I was such a huge turd-nugget. Anyway, turns out I was right; my poem along with two others in my class were chosen to be put in the book [here’s the Amazon link of the edition I was in]. The book is somewhere at my parents’ house, because I’m pretty sure I didn’t bring it with me.
How does that anecdote tie in with the article? Well, I
thought I had an innate ability to write well, when to be honest, I knew how to
play the system. Rhyming? Check. Ridiculous premise? Check. Set stanza form to
make it sound more lyrical? Check. 5th Grade Samantha didn’t play no
games, yo. And part of me purposefully knew that I was writing something that
would appeal to whoever was choosing the winners. But mostly, I just had been
kind of catered to believe I was an awesome writer.
I know now that there has to be an internal desire to be a
writer, but it does take hard work. I’m sure that if I had applied myself, I
could have focused more on the hard sciences or math, and went to college in
those areas. But I had always been told that reading/writing was my thing.
So was it because I was a girl? I don’t think so. Having an
older sister who had been praised more for the sciences and math areas, I think
it was more of a comparative things. At that same age, Heather struggled more
with getting the context behind the reading, while I usually made mistakes on
math (I would add when I needed to multiply, stuff like that). It was the way my
parents (and teachers) saw what we were actually good at. It was one of the
good things that came out of having a sibling so close to my age that —adults
could compare us and actually say, Sibling 1 is good at one thing while Sibling
2 is good at another.
I do think the theory holds some water. After all, I
remember in high school, getting so frustrated in my math classes, and just
plain becoming pissy about it. Granted, I still did well, but I was so used to
knowing how to do things almost immediately, or with very little thinking, that
any obstacle just bothered me. I quickly learned in college that sometimes
things take time.
I don’t think that was fully a girl thing either. It was more based on my own inflated ego about schoolwork. (What can I say? I know I was full of myself.)
I don’t think that was fully a girl thing either. It was more based on my own inflated ego about schoolwork. (What can I say? I know I was full of myself.)
My point is, while I can see why the article comes to that
conclusion, I wonder how much is situational and based on that particular girl’s
experience in the classroom.