It seems to me that this discussion is sufficiently on-topic (that is, relates to community bike shops) to keep as a part of this listserv.  I, for one, appreciate this conversation.

Angel

On Wed, Oct 28, 2009 at 10:19 PM, Mark Rehder <mark@drumbent.com> wrote:
What would be interesting is to find some cycling stats based on gender - how many women ride bikes compared to men?  How many do so for commuting or casual riding, and also as a competitive sport (pro or amateur)?  Here in Ottawa I would give a very rough estimate of a 3-1 ratio on the street.

But that does not seem to translate into the industry.  Of the shops around here, the ones that have women even just doing sales tend to the larger "sports" stores, and there's only one shop I'm aware of that actually had a woman wrench (McCrank's in the Glebe, where I used to work part-time).  And it's a bike-only  shop.

Is it the old thing of women still not being socialized to do mechanical things?  As I was growing up I thought feminism would finally help push all this gender-related crap aside, but we all know it has not.  But how deep is the mind-set?  I need to read up on my gender studies to see if little girls really do prefer dolls and little boys prefer trucks.

What has been heartening is how many younger women are showing an interest in fixing their own bikes.  We don't get too many women over 35 coming in, but lots in the 18-35 group.  We've had a few with some experience say they'd like to be come a Head Mechanic, but unfortunately none have so far followed through.  One of our current Shop Assistants did say last summer that she plans to become our first female HM, but then her new job seems to have kept her away from the shop, so we're no closer to even that modest goal.

Women have told us they appreciate seeing other women in the shop, especially as staff, answering questions and selling bikes.  While we are gender lopsided in terms of mechanics, we're at least doing better in terms of committed volunteer staff.  But it is certainly not representative of the general population.

One thing I've always found interesting (from the aspect of mechanical aptitude) is how many women will sew their own clothes and have good knowledge of how the machine works, while most men confess complete ignorance regarding sewing machines.  It seems to be that one mechanical place where most men will not go.  But of course sewing and knitting, etc. were traditionally considered as "women's work" so maybe the old gender thing does apply...

Mark (who will now read up on the concept of "male privilege")

_______________________________________________
Thethinktank mailing list
Thethinktank@bikecollectives.org
To unsubscribe, send a blank email to TheThinkTank-leave@bikecollectives.org
To manage your subscription, plase visit:
http://lists.bikecollectives.org/listinfo.cgi/thethinktank-bikecollectives.org



--
"UNLESS" - The Lorax