I got the link to that "sidebar" about the young vervet monkeys
http://www.sciam.com/media/inline/000363E3-1806-1264-980683414B7F0000_p44.jpg
sure, post what you have. are you thinking of posting your teacher's comments and saying why you disagree? that might be interesting
personally I think that TWO apparently contradictory things could be true:
1. it could be true that to some statist. signif degree there are anatomical/chemical differences between M/F brains
and that these differences influence the distribution of talents and native abilities for various things, and the preferences and motivations for various things
and that these anatomical/chemical differences have a genetic basis (somehow connect to XX and XY)
2. it could also be true that the amount of encouragement and access and success that women experience in math engineering and physical science could be as much or more influenced by sociological stuff, rather than genetic-based.
If both are true then the two "sides" of the debate could be having a stupid argument. In that case, to resolve things the sociologists should first of all acknowledge that there is evidence suggesting genetic M/F brain differences that could affect native ability in science
And those on the genetic side should acknowledge that it might be sociological stuff that is overwhelming the other stuff and might be responsible for much of the different rates of success.
then it becomes a quantitative matter to objectively sort out HOW MUCH affect to attribute to various causes.
I am not too excited about this either way, but I like the truth to come out. And I guess I think the vervet monkeys playing with trucks and dolls are cute.
And I also am excited that the smartest most revolutionary mathematician working in quantum gravity, that I can see, happens at the moment to be a woman named Renate Loll. she has a keen and original head.
partly it is just an age and generational thing, the other very smart people (men mostly) have gotten older and are less creative and it just happened that the next one up on the batting order happened to be a woman
(probably the German educational system is currently more effective in quantum gravity theoretical physics and the German system by coincidence also seems to bring up more women math/physics people).
I don't really know hard facts or statistics about this, but there is another up and coming German quantum gravity person called Bianca Dittrich
presumably Renate and Bianca would have played with trucks if they had been vervet monkeys
