ltmaverick25 said:
You are looking for an academic discussion centered on the recognition of individuality.
In part, but the question more about noticeble differences from how women and men, in general, responds to the training.
I guess to answer simply, I dont think that you can generalize an approach based on sex. It is very much individualized but the military does not accomodate such things. Furthermore, I think if you want to find "truths" to the types of questions that I think your asking - "how do people respond to different training methods"? I think you need to study society. You will probably find more answers by studying the way society has evolved in Canada, and therefore, how people, not women and men per se, respond to different forms of "poking".
Not questioning the training methods, wondering only about noticeble results. "Women" and "Men" are socially conditioned genders, which varies era to era, country to country, culture to culture. Already is noticeble differences on how women and men act, behave, and live differentely, as society is responsible for enforcing these differences for a very long time. Well that is gradually changing as 'gender equality' continues to be pushed for and in turn pursued, and these changes are resulting in interesting changes, and societal/cultural behaviours among women.
More women joining sports, politics, military, and other areas originally tradionally belonged to men, and those institutions gradually evolving and changing to accommodate, even if it is taking decades and generations. At first women had to adapt to how men does things in these fields, then started to change how things are done in general, and now becoming more 'gender equal' and 'gender blind', with women going up and men down, meeting in the middle somewhere.
Until these becoming society wide and the norm across the board, people are still placed into distinct set catagories of 'women' and 'men' according to what is between their legs, chromosomes, appearance, etc, each having set 'scripts' on how to behave, act, their roles, what sort of clothes to wear, behaviours, etc.
Canadian Forces adapted to these changes, by being gender equal and gender blind as much as possible, trying to avoid dwelling to much into the whole 'women' and 'men' gender stuff, focusing instead in its mission and mandate, yet still have to deal with due to rest of society still maintaining these catagories and differences.
Question is the noticeble differences of how women and men are responding to one set training standard, as there bound to be despite the exceptions. Then once notice, keeping track of the trend provides a sign on whether all this gender stuff starting to matter less and less as times goes on.
Okay, I think I need to go to sleep now...