Men and women have long been thought to have different
views across a range of issues, but is there a
gender gap between Canadian men and women's
views on Asia?
The «Teenage Apprenticeships: Converting awareness to recruitment» report states that more needs to be done to ensure equal guidance for both academic and vocational pathways and challenge
views about the suitability of different apprenticeships
across genders.
The report, funded by the Commercial Education Trust, revealed that the negative perceptions around apprenticeships among students, teachers and parents hampers take - up and highlights how more needs to be done to ensure equal guidance for both academic and vocational pathways and challenge
views about the suitability of different apprenticeships
across genders.
However, how boys and girls
view academic subjects varies
across subjects in ways that parallel the
gender gaps in subject test scores.
I stumbled upon Ubud in 1985 when my best friend was living there on a Fulbright (yes, she got paid to study the wayang
gender while living in a thatch - roof house with a million - dollar
view across a gorge to Mount Agung).
For more in this series, see my thoughts on Private
views, Art itself, Appointment only exhibitions, Artificial Intelligence replacing artists, Everyone's a Critic, Photo London, The Turner Prize, Art for art's sake, Conceptual art is complicated, Condo, How performance art is presented in museums, Frieze week floozies, too much respect for an artist's legacy, opinions not being welcome, an exhibition
across three countries, tackling race and
gender in art, artist - curators, art fair hype, top 5s and top 10s, our political art is terrible, gap left by Brian Sewell, how art never learned from the Simpsons, why artspeak won't die, so - called reviews, bad reviews are bad for business, the $ 179m dollar headline, art fairs appealing to the masses, false opening hours, size matters and what's wrong with video art.