Cormac... wrote: » I thought we were discussing Childminders as in minding the child in their/your home, not teachers
BetterThanThou wrote: » 100% of men are child molesters, if they're gay, that goes up to 200%, if they're foreign, it doubles again. So, I would not leave my child with a man, especially not a gay foreign man, because then there's a 400% chance they're a child molester.
bb1234567 wrote: » I would just be more comfortable with a female child minder.
hoodwinked wrote: » i was, i was saying if i had to choose a child-minder all things being equal i would choose whichever person got on best with my child, the teachers were an example of my real life experience of males vs females looking after my child.
Seamus1964 wrote: » I remember that Friends episode when Ross and Rachel hired a male nanny and Ross couldn't handle having a male around the house. It was a funny episode but did make me think that more blokes would have a problem with a male childminder than women would in general
Brutal Deluxe wrote: » It was the fact he just didn't think it was a job for a man, though. Not in a "all men are dangerous around kids". It was played for laughs and if anything, Ross looked like a worse person for it.
cena wrote: » Would you use a male minder. Even though they have all the courses etc. Would you be put off with a male minding your kids?
spurious wrote: » I wish more men worked in creches. I wish more men worked as primary and secondary teachers too. For any job to become seen as the preserve of one gender or another is not a good idea for society. (Oh no, shocking feminist idea!) As long as a man had all the necessary qualifications in safety and things, I'd have no issue with him working in a creche.
Egginacup wrote: » In my primary school (2nd class - 6th class) there was only 1 female teacher out of 21 classes. In my secondary school there were only 3 females out of a staff of 22 teachers and one of them just taught useless shit (religion and civics) although we liked her. Can't think of more male dominated than that.
One eyed Jack wrote: » I don't really think any artificial measures or incentives to redress the gender imbalances in these various career paths are ever likely to make any great inroads IMO.