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United States Education Programming

Google, National Parks Partner To Let Girls Program White House Xmas Tree Lights 333

theodp writes The Washington Post reports the White House holiday decor is going digital this year, with dog-bots and crowdsourced tree lights. "Thanks to Google's Made with Code initiative," reports a National Park Foundation press release, "girls across the country will experience the beauty of code by lighting up holiday trees in President's Park, one of America's 401 national parks and home to the White House." Beginning on December 2, explains the press release, girls can head over to Google's madewithcode.com (launched last June by U.S. CTO Megan Smith, then a Google X VP), to code a design for one of the 56 state and territory trees. Girls can select the shape, size, and color of the lights, and animate different patterns using introductory programming language and their designs will appear live on the trees. "Made with Code is a fun and easy way for millions of girls to try introductory code and see Computer Science as a foundation for their futures. We're thrilled that this holiday season families across the country will be able to try their hands at a fun programming project," said former Rep. Susan Molinari, who now heads Google's lobbying and policy office in Washington, DC.
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Google, National Parks Partner To Let Girls Program White House Xmas Tree Lights

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  • by msauve ( 701917 ) on Monday December 01, 2014 @10:14AM (#48497355)
    Sexist much?
    • by devoid42 ( 314847 ) on Monday December 01, 2014 @10:17AM (#48497377)
      That was my first though, anything that restricts to either sex for a non-anatomical reason is inherently sexist.
      • by Anonymous Coward on Monday December 01, 2014 @10:21AM (#48497407)

        It's not sexist if it discriminates against men

        • by Anonymous Coward

          Actually, yes it is. Though promoting an underrepresented (Underrepresented SINCE the mid 80's, sharp decline on women in tech since then, used to be far more parity between genders before) demographic has net positive results.

          But focusing on either gender exclusively IS sexist.

          Silly strawman.

        • by x0ra ( 1249540 )
          It *is*, but it is good sexism. Though, this is just as hypocrite as condoning social lies, but condemning all others...
      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by Trepidity ( 597 )

        It's fairly common to have programs specifically for underrepresented groups, especially if there is a goal of changing traditional perceptions that led to that underrepresentation. With gender it works the other way as well, with male-targeted programs in traditionally female occupations, such as those run by the American Assembly for Men in Nursing [aamn.org].

        In principle none of these occupations have to do with gender, but due to the significant imbalance and cultural attitudes around it, I think being a man in nu

        • by Truekaiser ( 724672 ) on Monday December 01, 2014 @10:38AM (#48497601)

          This is the swedish paradox. The more equal the society the more likely that the sex's flock to 'traditional' roles.
          The only difference seems to be in reaction to this, in sweden they decided to study it and found out, *gasp* human brains between the sexs are pretty much wired differently. Who would of thought of that in a species with sexual dimorphism. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

          In the united states how ever, the lack of women in STEM jobs and the lack of men in Nursing is seen not as a result of hard wired biological differences. But some kind of 'oppression' like women bullying men who go into nursing, and some invisible boogeyman called the 'patriarchy' calling women 'bossy' and making them not want to be leaders and such.

          • by fisted ( 2295862 )

            Who would of thought of that

            God dammit. Why do people constantly do this? It makes me rage harder than TFA.

          • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) *

            No-one is trying to make men and women the same. You misunderstand the problem.

            Some girls are interested in programming. Some boys are interested in nursing. Unfortunately for a variety of reasons they are either not encouraged or actually put off pursuing those interests. The idea here is to enable children to do the things they want to do, not to force them to do things they have no interest in.

            There will always be some imbalance because of the reasons you outlined. However, that doesn't mean it's okay to

        • by x0ra ( 1249540 )
          How about a program for underrepresented midwives men ?
      • by JerryLove ( 1158461 ) on Monday December 01, 2014 @10:21AM (#48497419)

        Was my first thought too.

        I can just see having to explain to a 7-year-old-child that heard about the program and doesn't understand why he can't try to be involved that it's because he's a boy. It's not just sexist, it may literally be the first obvious example of sexism that a young child notices.

        • by Roger W Moore ( 538166 ) on Monday December 01, 2014 @11:39AM (#48498253) Journal

          I can just see having to explain to a 7-year-old-child that heard about the program and doesn't understand why he can't try to be involved that it's because he's a boy.

          We've already had to have that conversation with our 10 year old son. The Engineering faculty of our local university runs a Raspberry Pi programming course...but only for girls. My wife contacted them to ask about programs for our son. The super enthusiastic airhead who responded suggested that they had lots of programs for boys but really it boils down to a few places in a summer program and even then much of that program is for girls only. My wife got as far as asking them how their blatant sexism was consistent with the Alberta Human Rights act but got a typical email full of PR but empty of content. In the EU such practice would actually be illegal under gender discrimination laws in Alberta it is less clear since they have this get-out clause 'unless there is a justifiable reason'.

          So we had to explain that there were no programs for him because he is a boy which he had a really hard time understanding because he has always been taught that sexism is wrong. Since actions speak louder than words this has undermined the lesson that he had learnt and I've already heard him once tease his older sister that she shouldn't use computers until she has had the 'special lessons for girls'! So as a scheme to eradicate sexism this is an epic way to shoot yourself in the foot. Even simple logic tells you that you cannot eradicate sexism while actually practicing it!

          • by x0ra ( 1249540 )
            This is how feminism created one more "misogynist".
          • by Anonymous Coward on Monday December 01, 2014 @12:05PM (#48498515)

            Clearly you missed a great opportunity to do the obvious: have him listed as a girl. Don't even bother trying to dress him up as what you imagine a girl would look like. And if they ask, he can say, "Sure, for the purposes of this program, I'm a girl". If they push the issue or kick him out, write a letter to the Chancellor of your University asking that if you have your son bind his genitals like women used to bind their breasts if he can return to the program? Perhaps if you dress him in gaudy makeup and dresses?

            Be sure to forward a copy to your local TV station. The real truth of eradicating sexism is to make a big fuss when sexism occurs. Just quietly writing on /. doesn't do a lot. Making a civil disobedience spectacle? It might not change anything, but it'll teach your son something more valuable than rolling over to some "airhead". It'll show you can participate in a program and gain something even when they actively deny you.

          • by Richy_T ( 111409 )

            he has always been taught that sexism is wrong. Since actions speak louder than words this has undermined the lesson that he had learnt

            On the contrary, it's the perfect time to teach him a healthy disrespect for authority and how to think for himself.

          • On the whole, I don't see how any of this is really any different from Affirmative Action, and the baggage that it too creates.
            As my user byline says, "Political Correctness: the misguided practice of enforcing the tenet that two wrongs make a right." as it so often leads to a form of discrimination to fight discrimination.
    • Sexist much?

      I agree, first thing on my mind too. I understand people want more women in programming, but this? THIS? This is literally the definition of sexism. You're telling me that just because someone is a boy, he can't operate the White House's Christmas Lights? Unbelievable.

    • by Chrisq ( 894406 ) on Monday December 01, 2014 @10:48AM (#48497705)

      Sexist much?

      They're worried that boys would know Morse code for "GET STUFFED OBAMA"

    • by sribe ( 304414 )

      Sexist much?

      Just being practical. They didn't want a giant pulsating cock & balls in lights. Come on, you know that would happen if they let boys in.

  • by Ol Olsoc ( 1175323 ) on Monday December 01, 2014 @10:18AM (#48497381)
    After these girls decide they love coding, and pursue an education in programming, will they have to move to India, renounce their citizenship, so they can get a job on an H1-B visa?

    Really, this all feels good, but are there going to be jobs available, or will this just be the next over-educated group making that minimum wage at McDonalds?

    • by reanjr ( 588767 )

      I don't know of any talented developer who is concerned about jobs going to India. Have you ever worked with foreign outsourcing? They make me feel MORE secure in my job.

      • I don't know of any talented developer who is concerned about jobs going to India. Have you ever worked with foreign outsourcing? They make me feel MORE secure in my job.

        Well, it was mostly a joke. But how many jobs are there going to be for American programmers, outside of defense, where they pretty much have to be citizens?

        This is more of a politically motivated thing than any real shortage. If there was a real shortage, would gender really matter?

    • by PRMan ( 959735 )

      Oh, yeah, there are NO programming jobs available...

      Just move to California. Every company is looking for 5 programmers.

      • Oh, yeah, there are NO programming jobs available...

        Just move to California. Every company is looking for 5 programmers.

        Unless they ae in Defense, probably H1-B's .

  • by CajunArson ( 465943 ) on Monday December 01, 2014 @10:19AM (#48497399) Journal

    Apparently it's OK to be sexist as long as it's in the "correct" direction.

    Fun factoid: If the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) had been passed in the 1980s, then this little government side-show would be black & white unconstitutional... I'm pretty sure the supporters of the ERA wouldn't have liked the outcome...

    • Speaking as a supporter of the ERA, I think if it had been passed in the 80's our society would be very different today, and I'd accept this minor cost pretty happily.

    • These groups don't actually discriminate against boys. They let them in, and are just labeled and marketed to encourage underrepresented groups.

      • by devoid42 ( 314847 ) on Monday December 01, 2014 @10:34AM (#48497561)
        The GP use's two different terms in his subject and body. You do correctly match them up, they may not in fact discriminate in admittance, but the labeling and marketing is sexist.
      • by msauve ( 701917 ) on Monday December 01, 2014 @10:46AM (#48497693)
        "These groups don't actually discriminate against boys. They let them in, and are just labeled and marketed to encourage underrepresented groups."

        Like marketing real estate for specific racial groups?
        • It's almost like there's a history of abuse in that arena, that distinguishes it.

          Guess what, you can't legally sell real estate to only women either. This "see it's just like this time the empowered majority abused the dis-empowered minority, except all these dozens of ways it's not" arguments are always really lame.

    • by McFly777 ( 23881 )

      If the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) had been passed in the 1980s, then this little government side-show would be black & white unconstitutional....

      An interesting choice of words, especially considering the 14th amendment and '60s civil rights laws, etc. which did pass; yet we still have Ferguson today.

  • by Michael Tiemann ( 3136525 ) on Monday December 01, 2014 @10:27AM (#48497479)

    Anybody remember this: http://www.nytimes.com/1993/12... [nytimes.com] ?

    "Thousands of Internet tourists used their computers to tap into a central computer at Cygnus Support, a software company in Mountain View, Calif., to see the "xmastree." (The name itself is a joke to cyberspace insiders, who regularly use programs with names that start with "x," as in xterm or xwindows.)

    "Two programmers at Cygnus had wired a real, 7-foot Christmas tree directly to the company's internal computer network, using simple controllers that enabled people on Cygnus Support's office network to turn the decorations, bells and lights on and off without leaving their computer terminals. The 6,000 or so outsiders who peered in from the Internet could view a simple computer rendering of the tree and check a status report to see which doodads were on and which were off, but only the people on Cygnus's local network could play with the switches."

  • by Charliemopps ( 1157495 ) on Monday December 01, 2014 @10:27AM (#48497483)

    Hack turning lights into something totally inappropriate coming in... 3... 2... 1...

    • Re:um... (Score:5, Funny)

      by martas ( 1439879 ) on Monday December 01, 2014 @10:49AM (#48497717)
      Nah, won't happen. Why do you think they excluded boys from the project?
    • Now that's a real possibility. It's pretty clear they're running arbitrary code on some machine on the whitehouse network. It can't be that hard to escape a sandbox when you've got arbitrary code with necessary access to a hardware layer.

      I think this would make a good theme for next years' innocent looking C contest.

  • by astro ( 20275 ) on Monday December 01, 2014 @10:31AM (#48497525) Homepage

    Yes, this is sexist, but not how others here are posting - sexism against boys (which actually isn't the case, as people are pointing out now). This is sexist in that it extends an invite for girls to code - for something pretty, something cute, something showy. Something typically associated with girls. It perpetuates the same kind of sexism as the "Barbie is a computer engineer" thing that got everyone so in a kerfuffle recently.

    • by XxtraLarGe ( 551297 ) on Monday December 01, 2014 @10:39AM (#48497615) Journal

      This is sexist in that it extends an invite for girls to code - for something pretty, something cute, something showy. Something typically associated with girls.

      I agree. They should put them on a project that's less showy but more important. Perhaps they could reprogram the White House's security system. It's not like they could do a worse job than is already being done [cnn.com]. And if they did? Oh, well.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Monday December 01, 2014 @10:45AM (#48497681)
      I'd agree that the role assignment you pointed out is sexist too. But the sexism against boys is present, actual exclusion is irrelevant. It's sexism in all the literature and information provided indicates exclusion.
    • Counterpoint: as a boy learning to code in my spare time, screen savers were an early fascination of mine. Clearly decorative, but also useful. Christmas lights are a very public very interesting environment to work with. You're right that it's not the most sex-atypical(meant in the sociological sense, not some biotruths way) thing in the universe, but it's probably the most public display of work a kid could possibly work with.

      I'm not saying you're wrong, that some "clever" idiot came up with it, just t

    • by meta-monkey ( 321000 ) on Monday December 01, 2014 @01:53PM (#48499687) Journal

      I don't know if that's really an issue. Boys and girls do like different things, and not taking those issues into account while trying to spark interest in a child would be foolish.

      And I don't buy that it's all learned behavior. My son is 2 and when we decorated his room and bought his toys when he was born, it was all animal stuff, which is gender neutral. That wasn't on purpose...I wasn't trying to be some gender-neutral hippy dad. It just happened that we used animal stuff. When we started bringing him to daycare at around 8 months old the other kids that he saw every day were three slightly older girls and they were into princess stuff. I'm not in construction, I don't drive a big truck, I don't watch TV shows about trucks. Besides "no," "mama," and "dada" my son's first word? "Truck." He'd point out trucks everywhere we go. Lose his shit if he saw a fire truck. All he wants to play with are trucks. I have no idea where the exposure to trucks came from. And it's fine by me, I wasn't trying for or against "boy stuff," just saying if you want to interest him in programming, making a game where you play with trucks would be a good idea. Girls are frequently not as interested in trucks. A programming challenge about, say, Christmas trees might interest them more.

      When I was a kid and I'd type in BASIC programs from books or magazines into my Apple IIe, they were mostly games, like a version of Space Invaders where you're shooting aliens. That probably wouldn't interest a lot of little girls as much as writing a program to control Christmas lights would.

      That said, I think it's complete bullshit to have a national program like this and specifically exclude boys. I'm really wary of all these "get kids coding!" and "code bootcamp" bullshit programs. It's just Zuckerberg and pals trying to flood the market with as many programmers as possible to drive down wages because they're incensed about having to pay middle class wages for developers. They don't have enough billions, obviously.

      And don't give me the "but not everybody can code..." thing. True, but there's an awful lot of people who could code who would have done something else. Maybe they'd have been a biologist or a librarian instead, but they see that they can code and that it's a good bet for a decent job and go with it. You still wind up with a flood of competent coders.

    • by Slashdot Parent ( 995749 ) on Monday December 01, 2014 @03:33PM (#48500695)

      not how others here are posting - sexism against boys (which actually isn't the case, as people are pointing out now).

      Excluding a sex from something is sexist by definition.

      How the fuck am I supposed to tell my son that his sister can do cool stuff but he can't because he's a boy?

  • Can you really call it a park when the public is not allowed to use it?

  • Really seems like the kind of thing that would have been a cool induction to programming for my young self.

    *Looks between legs*

    Shit, nevermind.
    • by x0ra ( 1249540 )
      That the thing, women need positive discriminating government run program to "enter" into tech, all I needed was a programming language book. Tell a lot in itself...
      • by seepho ( 1959226 )
        That doesn't really tell much. I didn't get into programming until college because I was never introduced to the idea that it was something I could just sit down and do until then. While I'm willing to admit that there are differences between the world now and the world of 15-20 years ago that I grew up in, I think the government should be in the business of making sure all kids have the opportunity to be introduced to programming, rather than catering to different subsets of people.
        • by JustNiz ( 692889 )

          >> I didn't get into programming until college because I was never introduced to the idea that it was something I could just sit down and do

          Hmm, I didn't need someone to introduce me to the idea, I just did it.

  • I'm sure a lot of women think this is great because it's just doing to men what they perceive has been done to them, but I fail to see how this is fair when the victims of the discrimination are young boys, who haven't even had a chance to do anything wrong yet. This is punishing them for alleged wrongs that they could never have had any part in. It's going way too far.
  • by x0ra ( 1249540 ) on Monday December 01, 2014 @12:46PM (#48498965)
    How comes male have an overall lower rates of higher education than women ? http://www.prb.org/Publication... [prb.org]

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