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I, particularly, have became aware of feminism and the benefits it brings only when I was in university, and by this time, I looked at my books and realized that only a few were written by women. I think that before establish a discipline about gender equality and sexuality (also important), students must be familiarized with all the accomplishments by female figures and how they influence our lives, our habits and our behavior, in so many ways. They need to grow and get to college knowing that sexism retards society.
And it's not difficult to introduce women and their importance in literature, history and science in the earlier years of school. It can starts by offering children books written by women, show portraits in slides of females who conquered achievements in science and, off classes, establish uniforms which don't separate gender. I think these earlier yeas of education (which includes family influence) are essential to develop a conscience in children about gender equality.
At high school, at this point, the students are already prepared to understand the importance of this type of discussion in class, simply because they recognize the huge contribution females have done over history, in all kinds of study.

I agree that school has part of the fault. I'm from Mexico and we hace so many important women in our history but in the elementary school, I only learned about two! Two! One was a independentist from the Spanish Empire and, without here, Mexican independence would have delayed for years. The other one was La Malinche and I always thought that the way teachers and people in general talked about her was completely wrong; she was a slave, and the Tlaxcaltecas sold her to Cortés, so she helped the spanish to conquer Mexico... And, although at that time she had no choice, the people still blame her. Five hundred years later.
So, yeah, I think that schools should talk more about important women in all areas. The representation is really important: when I was in elementary school many girls thought that we cannot be scientists, presidents, people in politics, etc. And that tendecy continued for a very long time in my school: all the books I read as assignments were written by men, except Anne Frank's Diary; some book were awesome, some weren't. I think I should have read more books written my women, but maybe I expect miracles from my elementary and middle school: the principal even said one time that women only should work as teachers to take care of their children and nobody said anything at all.
Mine it's just one example, but I bet I'm not the only one that has this kind of story. Gender equality has to start in that early years.




School system is a reflection of society. I don't think we can expect schools to give proper education in any way while society is rotten.
But obviously schools have a big influence and they should do much better than now.
But obviously schools have a big influence and they should do much better than now.



I remember that my history textbooks (which the state provided) always include things about Frida Kahlo, the "adelitas" who fought in the Mexican Revolution and other women, but, for some reason my teachers never ever mentioned them.


Tonya, your idea has (kind of) already happened in at least one class! A 2nd grade teacher friend of mine had her students write an essay comparing & contrasting Mother Teresa and her work in India with LeBron. In a guided discussion about empathy, the 2nd grade class studied Mother Teresa & learned that LeBron James' foundation is funding the college education of 6,000 students in Ohio. The students wrote about how and why both were empathetic people. I will borrow this lesson one day.
I agree that more conversations in schools need to happen, but I also see women & men who are helping change that lense, which is an encouragement. As an educator myself, it's part of my goal to minimize the experience of someone getting through 13 years of education without learning about the impact women have had in history and the impact they will have in the 21st century. There is a ton of literature to use in addition to the curriculum given :)

When I was a student in school, teachers had a lot more power in choosing what they taught in school. But in the last twenty years, state governments have taken more control over the curriculum and through testing, made teachers more accountable for teaching the state mandated curriculum.
Since what teachers teach in U.S. public schools is a curriculum created by each state's government. It should be no surprise that a curriculum created by governments controlled by men fail to recognize the need to teach women's issues, both domestic and international. As a social studies teacher, I agree that students need to be taught these issues and would welcome a change In the curriculum. Curriculums change when the public demands they change.

We are divided onto 12+1 different thinking characters. All of them can exist in women and also in men. Because school system prefer only Reasons values, there Instincts fall out as below average and Emotions who are more good at sports, will get more bad ratings.
The only people who retains on Reasons sieve, are the ones who think mainly with Reason values (1/4 of people), where Emotions and Instincts who are also born all over the world, cannot have a chance to reach important position because of average or lower grades.
The school system however look at everyone through his own established norms, and does not want to hear for some other way of thinking. In short, the school system looks like this:
https://d324imu86q1bqn.cloudfront.net...
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I'm looking forward to see your comments:)