The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Why can’t girls like space? all our children the sky We need to teach really is the limit

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I was back filming Driving Force last week, talking to some of Britain’s top sportswome­n for the new series to air in the autumn.

I had the chance to catch up with racing driver Jamie Chadwick at the newly opened Gravity in Wandsworth for a Girls On Track event, which encourages girls to get involved in all aspects of motorsport­s.

It was refreshing to see it was so much more than just racing karts. They learned about engineerin­g, technology and design, as well as gaining experience of facing a camera and changing tyres. Motorsport has been a male-dominated domain for such a long time that it was great to see it being opened up to girls.

It got me thinking about stereotype­s – and how many things are presented as either for boys or for girls in those early years. It’s not just STEM jobs. It’s toys, books and clothing too.

I found a great Twitter feed that featured boys and girls clothing and showed how products for girls are mostly unicorns and fairies slogans like “happy” and “kindness”, while the boys options are camouflage, dinosaurs and sports.

If these gender stereotype­s don’t change, children are always going to grow up with the belief that girls wear and play with certain things and boys wear and play with other things. Why can’t a girl like space? And boys be encouraged to be “happy”?

I do think there’s an element of kids naturally gravitatin­g towards specific things. Girls often choose pinks, purples, sparkles and glitter while boys opt for cars and footballs without being prompted. But we have to do more to encourage girls into STEM subjects. The clothes, toys and books they access at a young age can subconscio­usly push them in a certain direction.

For me, the big thing I have learned about attracting girls into sport and retaining them is the

idea of a friendship group. I have been a big believer in creating opportunit­ies for all girl starter groups from a younger age.

Boys are generally noisier, more robust and more competitiv­e and girls can be put off by that. It’s not the sport, but the environmen­t. It’s fun, friends and fitness that get girls into activities and those same three things keep them there. I think you need to create environmen­ts that allow girls to thrive...and if that means a bit of pink, purple and glitter then so be it.

But we do need to ensure that we show the younger generation the world is open to them to try whatever it is they want to try.

We have to be careful as coaches, teachers and parents not to stereotype just because that’s how we were brought up. There’s no reason girls can’t be astronauts when they grow up.

As a society, we are becoming much more inclusive of minority groups but, in my opinion, we need to look at how we do the same with gender.

Things are getting better. It’s a different world from the one I grew up in but, although there are many more diverse opportunit­ies for girls through education, there has to be encouragem­ent to progress and a career pathway in whatever they show interest and ability in.

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