Captain Marvel Author Shannon Hale Highlights the Problems With Gendered Library Programs
Her eight year old daughter said, "No girls allowed? That's not fair. I like robots."
At the library my 8yo girl points to this. “No girls allowed? That’s not fair. I like robots.” #StoriesForAll pic.twitter.com/QgpbLJItfL
— Shannon Hale (@haleshannon) October 12, 2015
Author Shannon Hale, one half of the team that’s writing the new Captain Marvel young adult book, took to Twitter and the #StoriesForAll hashtag to highlight a problem at her local library: emblazoned on a poster advertising a robotics program for kids were the words “No Girls Allowed.” Hale said her daughter saw the poster and said, “No girls allowed? That’s not fair. I like robots.” Apparently “No Girls Allowed” is a monthly program for the library, and it’s geared towards getting young boys into the library.
In the replies to her tweet, Hale is quick to point out that the library is trying to address a very real problem: engagement. These days, libraries have to fight twice as hard to keep kids interested in reading and activities outside of computers. They need kids coming in, sure, but this is not the way to do it.
I believe programs like this are well meant. I get librarians are fighting the good fight to get boys involved. #StoriesForAll
— Shannon Hale (@haleshannon) October 12, 2015
But I think it's worth questioning, what are likely unintended consequences from gendered library programs? #StoriesForAll
— Shannon Hale (@haleshannon) October 12, 2015
Excluding one group to get to another like this isn’t the way to go about getting kids interested in spending time at the library. This isn’t even to speak of the greater impact of making little girls feel like robots and engineering aren’t for them. This casual nudging out of girls from STEM-y topics needs to stop, especially at such an early age.
Lest we forget: robots are for everybody, as Cash Cayen and the Timmins Public Library now understand all too well.
It sucks to think that there are probably more than a few kids who’ve internalized the idea that robotics is or isn’t for them simply based on their gender.
You can do better. We can do better. We need to do better.
—Please make note of The Mary Sue’s general comment policy.—
Do you follow The Mary Sue on Twitter, Facebook, Tumblr, Pinterest, & Google +?
Have a tip we should know? tips@themarysue.com