Hello Muskaan! Love the infographic; I completely agree with your research and can see you put a lot of thought into it. It’s really encouraging to see people study this, and to see more women enter the STEM or typically ‘masculine’ fields. When my mom graduated UBC with a degree in mathematics, she was one of only two girls in a class otherwise comprised of men. It’s wonderful to see that the work of women, even not that long ago, has paved the way for future generations.
Hey Jenaya!
Thank you so much. Your mom truly sounds like one badass of a woman. I totally agree that women and their work have indeed paved the way for future generations 🙂
I really like your infographic! I think you selected a very important topic and provide a very insightful look on said topic. I found your infographic to be easy to read due to your use of contrasting colours, (light versus dark) and I also appreciate the inclusion of a method of resolving a conflict you’ve brought up.Though, and I hope you don’t mind me asking, I do have one question: Why pink?
Thank you for your reply and the question! I was actually hoping someone would notice the use of pink colour. I used it because pink is seen as a “feminine” colour and that has a negative connotation attached to it. It’s almost used as a weapon against women. So I used it in an infographic about gender inequality, to own it. Kind of like taking the power back.
June 25, 2021 at 6:13 pm
Hello Muskaan! Love the infographic; I completely agree with your research and can see you put a lot of thought into it. It’s really encouraging to see people study this, and to see more women enter the STEM or typically ‘masculine’ fields. When my mom graduated UBC with a degree in mathematics, she was one of only two girls in a class otherwise comprised of men. It’s wonderful to see that the work of women, even not that long ago, has paved the way for future generations.
June 27, 2021 at 5:25 pm
Hey Jenaya!
Thank you so much. Your mom truly sounds like one badass of a woman. I totally agree that women and their work have indeed paved the way for future generations 🙂
June 25, 2021 at 9:15 pm
Hey Muskaan!
I really like your infographic! I think you selected a very important topic and provide a very insightful look on said topic. I found your infographic to be easy to read due to your use of contrasting colours, (light versus dark) and I also appreciate the inclusion of a method of resolving a conflict you’ve brought up.Though, and I hope you don’t mind me asking, I do have one question: Why pink?
June 27, 2021 at 5:32 pm
Hey Joe!
Thank you for your reply and the question! I was actually hoping someone would notice the use of pink colour. I used it because pink is seen as a “feminine” colour and that has a negative connotation attached to it. It’s almost used as a weapon against women. So I used it in an infographic about gender inequality, to own it. Kind of like taking the power back.
Hope that answers the question ^_^