Selección femenina de fútbol colombiana

Selección femenina de fútbol colombiana

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In the field's soccer in the Luigi Pirandello school, the physical education teacher created a mini tournament to the boys and girls,but when the male tournament started, all the school was seeing them. And when the female tournament started only few people were seeing them.
What is the reason?
Today, I'll get and find some answers to this questions and I'll find a conclusion of this problematic.
The results will show:
- I'll ask some people to take into acrount to the soccer activity.
- Next, you can see an interview with a Luigi Pirandello student about this topic...

What reasons fewest spectatorsin the male team than the female team?
Student º1: Because the boys prefer the soccer unlike the girls and the girls prefer to play sports such a dance or other activities. Also because there are as many football teams unlike female teams.

What do you think about the sexism in soccer? 
student º2: Many people think that the girls doesn't have the same capabilities as a man, that we are weaker and they don't trying just because we are women. sometimes the girls say that a women can't try. We should create a new mentality that women can try play soccer and we get to do it better than the boys.

To conclude this new, the people think that if the girls will proposed to confront sexism, in the future, the Luigi Pirandello school will be a shool without sexism and the solution is in process that creates a new thinking about the sexism in the school.



This is the case of a woman who wants to play professional football in Braziland their opinion about the sexism in her country:
Karen Prado, 18, is part of a team called "Favela Street" - each Sunday afternoon, the team trains in the Complexo do Penha favela. About 80 female footballers - between the ages of eight and 85 - from Rio de Janeiro's slums play here.
While Brazil has won the World Cup five times, the country has yet to win a FIFA Women's World Cup title. Soccer was introduced to Brazil in 1894. However, women were prohibited from playing from 1941 to 1979.
Today, female players are often confronted with prejudice, says Philip Velduis, who founded Favela Street two years ago and coaches their training sessions.
"There's still a lot of inequality with girls. It's difficult to be a professional player - for example the idea that if you play football you are a lesbian, or that football is something that only men can do," Velduis said.
'Few options for girls'
Midfielder Drika Santos, 18, says a strong patriarchal hierarchy in Brazil keeps women's football underfunded. "Even though Brazil is considered 'the land of football'- this doesn't apply to female footballers. There are very little options for girls. If you want to play, you really have to struggle to find something," she said.

"In the last few years, women's football has grown, but the focus is always still on men's football. We can't even see women's football on TV."
This video taking about the opinion of a youtube channel about de sexism and soccer:

Australia's womens' soccer team, The Matilas, were subjected to shocking sexist abuse from British soldiers during a recent game. What's going on, and what can be done to stop it?


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