Together with his colleague Clara Åse Arnesen, Grøgaard has recently published the article “Gender differences and school performance: Different maturation?” in the Norwegian Journal of Youth Research. Grøgaard, researcher at The Nordic Institute for Studies in Innovation, Research and Education (NIFU) and sociologist at University College of Southeast Norway. The differences reach their peak in tenth grade before they gradually start falling during first year of upper secondary school,” says Jens B. The difference between girls’ and boys’ performance in subjects such as English, Norwegian, and maths increase in the girls’ favour from the fifth grade. In general, girls perform better than boys do, and the discussion concerns whether this has to do with different maturation processes or whether the Norwegian school system is better accommodated for girls. In Norway, gender differences in school are frequently discussed. The Boys can be watched on Amazon Prime Video while Avengers: Endgame can be viewed on Disney+.This article was originally published on Kilden - Information and news about gender research in Norway. They claimed that show is just jealous of the movie’s success and called Kripke a misogynist. It’s an easy shot.”įans on Twitter were furious at this statement, and it did not take long for many people to defend the scene from Avengers: Endgame. When there’s something really ridiculous in either superhero or celebrity or Hollywood culture, we’ll immediately go after it. So that just created for us a target, a satirical target. I saw it, too, and I was like, ‘That was the dumbest, most contrived-’ And she’s like, ‘Don’t get me started.’ She found it condescending and I agreed. “As for ‘girls get it done,’ a lot of that came from our executive producer, Rebecca Sonneshine, who came in after the weekend Endgame opened. Kripke revealed in an interview where this scene came from. As the fight went on, Hughie ( Jack Quaid), Frenchie ( Tomer Kapon) and Mother’s Milk ( Laz Alonso) watched the brawl in awe, with Frenchie quipping that “girls really do get it done.” As Stormfront began to overpower the two of them, Queen Maeve ( Dominique McElligot) joined in to help, and the three heroines soon gained the upper hand on Stormfront. The scene in which Kripke parodied the moment took place in the season 2 finale, where Starlight ( Erin Moriarty) and Kimiko ( Karen Fukuhara) faced off against the Nazi superhero Stormfront ( Aya Cash). Recently, Kripke has been one of its most vocal critics. Even though there were many people who adored this female-empowering moment, there were others who were disgusted by the scene, considering it to be pandering and forced. This scene and team-up has been referred to as “A-Force” by the fans. In the particular scene from Avengers: Endgame, Captain Marvel ( Brie Larson) is joined by all of the surviving female superheroes such as as Pepper Potts ( Gwyneth Paltrow), Scarlett Witch ( Elizabeth Olsen) and many others as they move through Thanos’ ( Josh Brolin) army. On October 17, Eric Kripke, the showrunner and creator of the popular Amazon Prime television series The Boys received strong backlash on Twitter when he revealed that one of the scenes in the season 2 finale was meant to make fun of a female-empowerment scene from Avengers: Endgame.
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