Christina Hoff Sommers: 'A threat to Title IX'

Article here. Excerpt:

'• Title IX could make ''similar striking advances'' for women in science and engineering. Indeed it could -- but at what cost to science? The idea of imposing Title IX on the sciences began gaining momentum around 2002. Then, women were already earning nearly 60 percent of all bachelor's degrees and at least half of the Ph.D.s in the humanities, social sciences, life sciences and education. Meanwhile, men retained majorities in fields such as physics, computer science and engineering. Badly in need of an advocacy cause just as women were beginning to outnumber men on college campuses, well-funded academic women's groups alerted their followers that American science education was ''hostile'' to women. Soon there were conferences, retreats, summits, a massive ''Left Out, Left Behind'' letter-writing campaign, dozens of studies and a series of congressional hearings. Their first public victim? Larry Summers, who was forced to resign as president of Harvard University in 2006 after he dared to question the groups' assumptions and drew a correlation between the number of women in the sciences and gender differences implied in math and science test data.'

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Feminization of the math and science fields will hurt us economically and in the global marketplace.
-ax

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