I think one is the socio-cultural notion that they don't know they can do it. We want to get them young enough so that no one has told them they can't.
As we've also heard on the panel, too, it's not going to be an interstate, a clean road. There are going to be bumps along the way. That's where we need a network. To me that's one of the greatest things in FIRST. It gives them other people they can talk to for support when they need it. They're always there as a peer, as someone you can bounce ideas off.
Again, I think, it's giving them the confidence. We've even seen some school teams here where they have two teams. They have one for girls and one that's a coed team. The differences on the teams are remarkable, even though they run side by side.
For women, if they don't know they can do it.... A lot of times you can watch the dynamics and see the guy say that he can program. The neatest thing about programming a robot is that they don't know what gender is. A robot runs on the program. If it's a good program, it performs. If it's a poor program, it doesn't. It doesn't care who the programmer is. All of a sudden, then, everybody is sitting back and saying that they didn't think of that.
Again, it levels the playing field in so many ways, and that builds the confidence. Later on, when they're in a situation like that and someone says no to their idea, they're going to say, “Wait a minute, I know there's validity here and I'm going to stand up for it.”
In some ways, it's again that voice at the table that's assured and strong and says, “No, let's look at the data.” Again, that's the core we're building inside those young women.