That really is the fear underlying the denial of gender difference - if men and women differ, it makes women inferior - which is why I have tried to point out that it is misogynistic. Not intentionally. But it does prevent strengths more prevalent in women from being recognised.
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Iberia or south europe may be a special case, were gender roles were hiper conservative, we were much later to change see here progression for US, change from man to women as teachers happens between 1850/1900, Portugal was the case still by early 1900's https://stuff.mit.edu/afs/athena.mit.edu/org/w/wgs/prize/eb04.html …pic.twitter.com/PXDmfFrUDI
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We didn't really have schools commonly until the late 19th century!
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true, mass education starts from 1880 on, at different speeds in different countries, (the Prussians, had to be them, started almost a century earlier.)
End of conversation
New conversation -
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but yes, the big change happens post ww2 at all levels, but earlier 1800's remember reading (when reading about implementation of formal educational systems across europe), that it began as a man's occupation. child rearing sure, always female.
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