I?m putting this under the tools heading as I don?t know which would better apply. Hope I don?t get myself in trouble with this.
I volunteer with a group that encourages teens toward careers that will desperately be seeking talent in the future by ?giving them a taste? (for lack of a better term) of what is involved. We have both boys and girls in our mentoring group. We have a girl who wants to become an aircraft mechanic. From my many years as an auto mechanic I feel she has considerable talent for this particularly in deductive reasoning and problem solving. While there is already a shortage of aircraft mechanics, and getting worse, I am concerned about her employment opportunities in say 10 years from simply being female in a male dominated trade. These type of careers usually require some form of on the job mentoring or apprenticeship at least in the beginning. In this day and age of #MeToo many men don?t want to risk their careers or have their lives destroyed by a claim from someone who may be in, for example, a temporary ?fragile hormonal? state. As evidenced by the Kavanaugh hearings gilt is assumed and proof is not necessary. I haven?t been in the work place for 10 years but even back then most of the male technicians and engineers, myself included, would never allow themselves to be alone, without witnesses, in any proximity of a female employee. For this reason I?m hearing that some companies, of all kinds, are reluctant to hire female employees. What are your thoughts?
On a side note; I am shocked at some of the boys in our group in that they seem to be clueless as to what even the simplest hand tools (a file for example) are used for. I fear we are breeding a generation of pansies.
I volunteer with a group that encourages teens toward careers that will desperately be seeking talent in the future by ?giving them a taste? (for lack of a better term) of what is involved. We have both boys and girls in our mentoring group. We have a girl who wants to become an aircraft mechanic. From my many years as an auto mechanic I feel she has considerable talent for this particularly in deductive reasoning and problem solving. While there is already a shortage of aircraft mechanics, and getting worse, I am concerned about her employment opportunities in say 10 years from simply being female in a male dominated trade. These type of careers usually require some form of on the job mentoring or apprenticeship at least in the beginning. In this day and age of #MeToo many men don?t want to risk their careers or have their lives destroyed by a claim from someone who may be in, for example, a temporary ?fragile hormonal? state. As evidenced by the Kavanaugh hearings gilt is assumed and proof is not necessary. I haven?t been in the work place for 10 years but even back then most of the male technicians and engineers, myself included, would never allow themselves to be alone, without witnesses, in any proximity of a female employee. For this reason I?m hearing that some companies, of all kinds, are reluctant to hire female employees. What are your thoughts?
On a side note; I am shocked at some of the boys in our group in that they seem to be clueless as to what even the simplest hand tools (a file for example) are used for. I fear we are breeding a generation of pansies.