Girls, Gaming and Gender Stereotypes

lego gender remixerI’ve shared this Lego Gender Remix site before but it is so powerful in what it does that it is always worth sharing out again. I used this site yesterday in my class of sixth graders as we begin diving into the concepts of our Digital Life unit, in which we explore technology and media from a variety of angles. Talking to 11 year olds about the permanence of the web and technology … it’s an eye-opening experience for many of them.

One of the many angles we explore is advertising and gender stereotyping (a term which is relatively unfamiliar to them and which leads to a long discussion about cultural values placed on gender). If you spend time with the Lego Remixer site, you’ll see why it is so powerful for this conversation. By mixing the media of a “boys’ commercial” with the media of a “girls’ commercial,” you can deconstruct the stereotypes embedded in the advertising.

It’s a real eye-opener for many of my students when we do this, and in one of my classes, it led to a long discussion about the design of aisles in toy stores (the few that are left in existence). The girls’ aisle? All dolls and filly pink dresses and unicorns and horses. The boys? Guns and vehicles and action heroes.

“You know,” one of my astute girls observed, “if we saw a boy walking down the girls’ aisle at the toy store, we’d probably make a judgment about them. We’d look at them funny.”

Another piped in. “But if a girl is in the boys’ aisle, no one cares,” he added, and the room went silent as we thought about that. No one disagreed with those assumptions.

We talked about avatars, which was the main hub of our lesson, and how people represent or misrepresent themselves in online spaces. I asked my students why they think a boy might use a girl avatar or vice versa. More quiet thinking.

“In some gaming sites,” said one boy, “girls are not always welcomed. Maybe a girl would want a boy avatar so they can just play and not get harassed.”

No one took exception to that insight — that girls are treated differently in gaming sites that they visit. But when I asked if girls are as good gamers as boys, everyone agreed that gender does not connect with gaming skills.

So, I asked, why are girls treated different? More quiet.

“I think it’s because some sites are like clubs for boys,” a girl suggested,” and they think they own the world. They don’t like having girls in the club.”

“Or,” suggested another girl, ” they don’t like that girls being better than them at the game.”

Some of you know that I teach a video game design unit, and I do try to pay attention to these gender issues. It’s not a boy-centric unit of learning, yet I do find I have to be attentive to supporting and elevating the girls to a certain confidence level. Many girls seem apt to cede the expertise to the boys, and I work against that tide.

When I showcase student-created games as exemplars, I make sure the girls get slightly more equal footing than the boys. I ask girls who have figured out “workarounds” to share that knowledge and insight with the class. I don’t ignore the boys, but I pay attention to the girls a little bit more in our gaming unit. I have never heard any of my boys speak down to girls when we do gaming. But I am not naive, either. I know it happens in the spaces where I don’t go and that the adult world simmers with these inequities.

Look at this quote from Anita Sarkeesian, who is the heart of #Gamergate.

“The notion that gaming was not for women rippled out into society, until we heard it not just from the games industry, but from our families, teachers and friends. As a consequence, I, like many women, had a complicated, love-hate relationship with gaming culture.” from New York Times

What is very obvious each year is this insight as a teacher: my girls often design and build and publish more engaging games than my boys do. Ok, so I am generalizing a bit and maybe stereotyping my kids, but it’s true. (Note to self: document this during this year’s project?) The girls often design their video games with rich storytelling, where the game play informs the storytelling (the while premise of our game design unit). The boys go for the rapid fire action, the shooting avatars, the survival of the protagonist. Their stories are often the weakest element of their projects.

My challenge as a teacher is to do my best to remove those walls and have girls and boys share the best of what they bring to the table, so that we can all learn together as a community of many, not a group of two genders. I can’t take it for granted that gender issues do not exist as a wedge in the world of gaming and beyond. It does. I just need to be cognizant of this reality, and make sure girls are not just invited into the party, but are front and center alongside the boys at all times.

Peace (in the think),
Kevin

 

9 Comments
  1. loved this, Kevin! So insightful for such a young age (aren’t they middle-school students?) – and I agree with all of it. Off to play the gender mix advertising thing!

    • Yes, they are young but give they are the target audience for marketing, they need to be aware of the manipulations that happen in the world. It’s part of our digital life/media awareness unit.
      Kevin
      PS — thanks for the video you shared on Twitter. I will be reposting on my blog as a companion to this post.

  2. The lego site is a great visual reminder why it is smart to make sure girls “get slightly more equal footing” when you talk about topics and pathways more routinely associated with boys. The researchers from CU Boulder we work with report that girls engage every bit as deeply as boys when teachers use guided inquiry, but when teachers use more direct instructional methods, including linear game creation tutorials, girls disengage. Fascinating to me that in your classroom-as-laboratory you see the pedagogy as key factor and you’ve developed strategies to support girls’ success.

    As a parent of two girls I look at the Lego products and I have concerns about the pathway implications for girls. Boys, Lego suggests, love science, history, space, and city planning. Girls, it appears, love…picnics and tea parties??? I really appreciate how you also raise students’ awareness about the stereotypes they can see all around them. Awesome!

    • hey Joe,

      your reply made me remember how my friend says her husband became more of a feminist once he became the parent of a girl. I don’t know how across-the-board that is, but it’s interesting.

      You’re right about the tea parties and picnics thing, though to be fair, the lego girls’ game also has a “vet” option, which I guess is a little scientific 🙂

      What is actually wrong, is the way science is taught, with only examples from cars, sports and space… which girls are also taught NOT to engage with too deeply. It is a vicious cycle.

      So… if you’re going to live in a society that discourages girls’ love of cars (weird in my opinion, as cars are generally fascinating to all people, I find, though of course to varying degrees), then find ways to teach SCIENCE with examples that are more applicable to girls’ lived experiences.

      And again, there is no reason why girls would not like sports as much as boys, but if they’re raised in a society that encourages boys to play sports more often than girls, then teaching science should not focus so much on sports examples.

      One of the things Anita Sarkeesian points out is a lot of the boys’ games are also violent/aggressive and the ads focus on blowing up things and fighting… that’s maybe more problematic.

  3. Thanks for sharing your observations and reflections Kevin. Relevent and engaging.
    The statement about the girls making more engaging games than the boys is particularly thought provoking. ‘Digging deeper’ questions that immediately popped into my head were, “Who finds them more engaging? The boys? The girls? You the teacher? The whole class?”
    If you’re marketing a product e.g. LEGO a major part of the strategy is to know the target audience.
    Is a major factor in the lack of female gamers a lack of games that appeal to the majority of females?
    Perhaps not surprising given the gender imbalance in game makers/coders.
    Are the students challenged to develop games that appeal to a certain audience? Could the girls design games that appeal to boys and can the boys design games that appeal to the boys? What would the games actually be like and are they that different?
    You can’t come up with all the answers, hopefully it’s enough to just ask the questions.

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