Travis B. wrote: ↑Tue Apr 18, 2023 1:53 pmOh, I agree. I was in part responding to the BBC article you linked, where the very perception of "geekiness", even without any sexism, dissuades girls from wanting to become programmers, a suggestion that I personally dislike due to its unfortunate implication that including neurodivergent people and women are mutually exclusive.
I think it's useful to break down what that "geekiness" consists of. According to the article, it was that computer programmers were seen as "male, socially awkward and intense".
The "male" part is quite accurate: over 90% of computer programmers identify as "male". Since most women are not misandrists, it isn't the simple fact of their maleness that puts them off, it's their negative experiences of male-dominated spaces and the sexist behaviours which are allowed to flourish in them. All things being equal, I don't think I'd want to work in a workplace that was 90+% male either.
The "intense" part is interesting. The article doesn't go into detail on what that means, but I have a guess: Research shows that women value work/life balance in their employment more than men do (since they are still expected to take on more of the burden of maintaining a household and performing emotional labour than men are). But "techbro" culture romanticises the grind, producing the impression that this would be hard to achieve in an IT position[*].
So that leaves the "socially-awkward" part as the only one that could truly be said to be stigmatising neurodivergence. It would be interesting to see if the research teases out exactly what traits are implicated in this. Maybe it really is certain traits that are linked to neurodivergence (such as a dislike of small talk), in which case the burden really should be these girls' educators and caretakers to teach them how to accommodate a broader range of styles of interpersonal interaction. But it's also possible that the traits are unhealthy ones (such as casual misogyny and toleration of abuse) which should be eradicated from the culture.
[*] Where this originates is an interesting question. Mark has made the point here that the development cycle caused companies to demand excessive overtime immediately before product launches, to the point where this simply became the everyday expectation. I wonder if some of it may also be due to neurodivergence, since one common trait of folks on the spectrum is an ability to focus obsessively on completing a particular task. It's easy to see how a workplace where this trait is common could go from accommodating it to normalising it and demanding it of workers who would prefer a different way of working.