On 4/17/2015 4:31 PM, Marko Rauhamaa wrote:
beliav...@aol.com:

If your target audience is women, I think you should have termed it
the Django Womens Workshop rather than the Django Girls Workshop.
Referring to adults as children can be seen as condescending.

Are all of you claiming this so ignorant that 'girls' is sometimes used to refer to adult women, just as 'boys' is someitmes used to refer to adult men? The co-founders of 'Django Girls', djangogirls.org, are two Polish females. Judging from their pictures on their twitter pages, they were perhaps in their 20s at the time. They love Python, are Django Core Developers, and want to share, especially with other women. They were *not* condescending themselves or other women.

"
We want to inspire women to fall in love with programming.

So we organize free Python and Django workshops, create open sourced online tutorials and care about amazing first experiences.
"


You got it wrong. The name is not offensive. However, it suffers from
two serious problems:

  * You might think it's for children only.

I would not.

  * The name's missing an apostrophe.

Nope. The organization is 'Django Girls', not 'Django Girl'. A Djange Girls Workshop is a workshop by and for Django Girls.

--
Terry Jan Reedy

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