few months ago I was contacted M ª Carmen Pérez del blog Tecnodivas . I meant to reply to questions by email, and from there, and the other women bloggers who would answer would take a series of articles on the role of women in the web 2.0. Yesterday, we published the first, entitled " Tecnología sin género. Un café virtual con cuatro chicas geek ".
Que alguien se interese por tu opinión como profesora ya te halaga, pero si encima te sienta con mujeres de la altura de Dolors Reig , Meritxell Roca o Susana Alosete , ... la verdad, a mí me abruma, sobre todo porque creo que hay otras profesoras blogeras mucho más activas y representativas de este mundo de los edublogs que yo.
Entonces ... ¿por qué Mª Carmen se puso en contacto conmigo precisamente? Pues la respuesta en muy sencilla. Poned en Google las palabras "mujeres y tecnología" y el primer artículo que sale in the search is one that published the second month of having opened this blog, titled exactly as follows: Women and Technology .
This is certainly the most satisfying post has given me since two years ago I decided to write what they thought in public. Eduardo Larequi first quoted him, then I left a comment itself Amaya Rodrigo key in his own hand, I wrote from the blog "We are not afraid of mice" . But I am surprised that so few articles on the net on the subject, so that the mine has to leave first. Not interested in talking about the few developers who are in the world? Or that when you put "girl" + "firefox" in Google will release a gorgeous chick Samantha Fox to teaching part of her breasts before the red fox logo? Do not want to talk about the pile of messages our children hear every day, such as "do not cry, you look like a girl" or "do not be pussy?
As a teacher and mother I think that training and education are the basis of gender equality at all levels, not just technology. But education depends on many factors, and is given from many areas: school, family, environment. I've always been surprised that an educated society women (Mothers and teachers) is so macho ... What are we doing wrong? Did we pass the stale same patriarchal values, generation after generation? Women have an obligation to make the values \u200b\u200bchange, but how? Leading by example, of course, but it is so difficult ... How can I convince my students to choose technical careers, if I did not I?
I hope you like the article, and to put our two cents as teachers we are forming the character of the twenty-first century citizens that our girls have the same opportunities as their peers. Each
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