How relevant is computer engineer Barbie?
Growing up, I was not a Barbie girl. This most likely stems from two reasons: I was a tomboy, and both of my parents worked for toy companies. Therefore (and yes, I’m only bragging a little bit here), I had no lack of toys, dolls, gizmos and games to keep me busy.
Barbie sat on the periphery; a known entity, but not one I was very interested in getting to know better. I was aware of her spectacular outfits and handsome boyfriend Ken, but at the end of the day I was far more interested in my Crash Test Dummies set or my Micro Machines.
My interest in technology, I feel very strongly, was incubated in part because I grew up in a house that encouraged it. I was allowed to tinker with my toys (usually destroying rather than enhancing) and to spend hours playing with my Nintendo or Game Boy. Kids are always going to make their own decisions about what they like or don’t like (and clearly not all of them have the advantage of a surplus of toys around the house), but I believe that one of the main reasons more girls don’t become interested in technology and IT is because they’re taught (or shown) that this is the realm of the boys.
Now, getting back to Barbie. Despite her physically unattainable body shape (which has probably caused more than one case of body dismorphia in a young female), she’s had a lot male-centric jobs in her day: an Air Force fighter pilot, a firefighter, NASCAR driver, and President just to name a few. Her latest endeavor, computer engineer, is interesting for several reasons: it was voted upon online, and won largely due to a campaign on (male-dominated) link-sharing site Reddit; computer engineering is one of the final frontiers where women are still hugely underrepresented; and finally, there’s just not a lot of romanticism involved with the profession. How many 5 year-old girls out there say they want to be computer engineers when they grow up?

Barbie’s popularity could have helped in that last area. When I say, “could have,” I mean that had this happened 10 years ago, when Barbie was still relevant to a young girl’s development, it could have had a lasting effect on the number of women involved in that career path further down the line. While Barbie sales have seen an uptick in the last year, she has a lot of new competition: there are far more interesting and flashy things for young girls to latch onto, like Bratz, iCarly, Moxie Girls, Hannah Montana, etc.
The Society of Women Engineers and the National Academy of Engineering worked with the Barbie designers at Mattel to make a model that fit the “look” of a female computer engineer. I don’t know too many women in IT rocking the sparkly leggings and white leather vests to work at the office (unless… she’s from the future). Clothing choices aside, I think this is a good move. The fact that something as quintessentially feminine as Barbie is out there showing little girls that IT and computer engineering isn’t all for the boys is encouraging. It’s a small step, but hopefully one that leads other toy manufacturers to follow.
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#3 written by Michelle 1 year ago
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As the parent of a little girl (she’s 2, so she hasn’t gotten a real barbie yet), I love this.
Kids, especially young girls, are bombarded with awful, awful influences…if my daughter’s going to get a barbie (and I don’t doubt she will), why wouldn’t I want her to have one that shows she can grow up to be more than just a pretty face?
Yes, they could have designed the doll so she was more reflective of what a real woman looks like, but then girls wouldn’t have been interested in it. By making it bright and pink, little girls will look at it. And I’d rather she play with this than yet another swimsuit edition.
Having said all of that, my daughter will also be growing up in a household where she has plenty of other options. But with the constant influence of media these days, I freely expect her to gravitate towards the pink and glittery.
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Really interesting in fact i have seen it myself in the past years you barely see any woman on the engineer “side” of the school but in these years you see a lot of woman that in fact want to be engineers and are very dedicated.
So yeah i think this “theres no woman on the internet” its because the old “classic” parents but now that the childs of those parents are becoming parents themselves, things will change since this generation is more open minded.
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#6 written by Sara 1 year ago
I think it’s a good move too. I am annoyed at the articles I’ve read about how “a female computer engineer would not wear those clothes”, as this is perpetuating more stereotypes – the point of this doll is to show that girls can be what they want to be. Just because they’re computer engineers doesn’t mean they can’t have a sense of style! Barbie is bringing her own Barbie style to the field, and that’s great.
As a female in the comp eng field, I actually do have some friends who have pink laptops, funky glasses and wear sparkly leggings.
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i hail from a very unique background – the only child of a single mother, i’m a father with two daughters who has spent the bulk of his career making games at a broadcaster where nearly all of the positions of power were held by women. i’m told this is not the norm.
i’ve got a big chip on my shoulder because of this. i feel that the women who were in producer roles at that broadcaster, overseeing sites and tech development for teevee channel brands, were there because they were women, not because they were necessarily talented, capable, or worthy of the role. Some were. Many weren’t.
We shouldn’t try to stack the deck with women just because they’re under-represented in this industry. They did not grow up with software engineer Barbie, which might have helped. But it didn’t happen. These women made fun of me for my love of computers while i was growing up, and decided early that computers were uncool. Fine. The consequence of that is that those women don’t get to have jobs in this amazing industry.
My daughters, and girls in the next generation, DO get to have jobs in this industry. i’m raising my kids to foster a love of technology, similarly to the way you were raised. i feel that you (and my daughters) somehow DESERVE positions in the industry, while catty chicks who slide in because they know someone in the sisterhood can go take a flying leap.
But i feel that way about any industry. The people who work in it should be the people who love it and who excel at it. No sense in having incapable, unmotivated people taking up positions that more deserving people could have.
- Ryan
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#16 written by Michael 1 year ago
I have a 7-year-old that loves her Barbies. I think it can still be influential at times. From a parental stand point, some of the other dolls you mentioned are more dolled up and slutty even than Barbie. And the kids still call them all “Barbies” no matter the brand. If it helps encourage 1 kid’s dream, isn’t it a success?
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#20 written by Hubert Abiera 1 year ago
Oh nice, from what college?
Btw, I really like this post. I’m an engineering major and in all of my classes there would only be 3 or 4 girls out of a class of 40. We need more girls in the engineering majors so we can have a more diverse perspective on our designs, which should lead to better innovation.
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#21 written by Ian 1 year ago
I wasnt freaking out about the iphone. I am a TV/Radio Major at my University and all they do is try to force Apple down our throats. So when you mentioned iphone i was annoyed. Im not saying the iphone isnt good, it is but there is too much Apple.
All they will teach us is Final Cut Pro, not in the industry standard Avid. Nor any other products like pinnacle and such. Im sorry if I seemed freakish. I use Linux. -
Glad we’ve moved beyond a Barbie model like this having to say redonkulous things like, “Math is hard!” Or in her case, “C++ is hard!” I had a TON of Barbies but I kind of hated them mostly because they were blonde and I was/still am not. I liked my Jem doll, though – her bf was way hotter than Ken.
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#23 written by Amy 1 year ago
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#25 written by Kevin Chu 1 year ago
Thank you, V! As the father of a 6 year old girl, who has been known to play with her mom’s old Barbies, I felt that CE Barbie is a good thing. Why can’t a girl like Barbie *and* computers? My kid does. My girl like dolls and Star Wars. She watches High School Musical but also Lord of the Rings. I don’t want to to feel like she needs to choose.
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#27 written by David 1 year ago
I have to agree with you on the look. I know a fabulous Development Manager who rocks a great look but also does damn good work to the point that she was shortlisted for one killer job with a major tech company and picked up one for another.
I have to disagree on the irrelevance of Barbie though. My 3 (nearly 4) year old daughter constantly switched between playing Star Wars in the backyard with her older brother (I’m sure my neighbours think my kid’s names are Luke & Leia) and playing with the tub of Barbies she scammed a massive discount for at a local school fete. I think Barbie does have a place still in many girl’s lives and I’ll buy her a computer engineer Barbie, tell her about it and then let her strip it and change the clothes and dress up. It’s all about planting seeds and I’ll tell her this Barbie coded Plants Vs Zombies (her favourite game).
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There’s a Veronica Edition of that Barbie doll.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/dave-friedel/4410285976/ -
I grew up with both Barbies and Ninja Turtles.
What I remember is the difference playing with them.
With my Turtles it was adventures, me and my brother had the turtles climb the highest mountain in the world (our stairs) fight the bad guys and explore the world.
The Barbies just changed clothes, brushed their hair and talk where pretty. All their accessories where pink, cute and useless.
Just compare the turtles wan to Barbies pink mini cab, super cool vs. total piece of beautiful junk.
My point is, yes I do think Barbie getting a Laptop is a good move…but it’s still just another pink useless accessorise that matches her clothes…. -
Very interesting discussion, and a topic taken up by Pamela Fox, a very cool Googler in a recent Ignite talk http://www.igniteshow.com/videos/im-barbie-girl-cs-world)
Well worth the 5 minutes on this topic!
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#34 written by Matthew Boehm 1 year ago
I think the biggest sign that Computer Engineer Barbie is significant is the reaction from so many female engineers. It’s not every day adults get so excited over a children’s doll, but I believe many see this as a key sign that the mainstream is starting to look past the stereotypes that have been established for computer-related jobs.
As computers have become more ubiquitous, the image of computer engineers has shifted from people playing with oscilloscopes or punch-cards in a lab somewhere to the the people that made that cool Facebook app or the designers of your beloved smartphone.
“Computer Engineer Barbie” seems somewhat contradictory, though. Barbie is representative of some of the earliest gender roles we assign to our children; girls play with dolls, while boys play with toy cars, sports, etcetera. I’m not saying society shouldn’t have gender roles, but is the best way to tell girls that it’s cool to be an engineer to make them play with their computer engineer dolls?
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It’s nice to see them catch up and show Barbie in a tech profession. It’s really a shame that more women aren’t in professions like these. Though it seems like things are changing which is a wonderful thing in itself. I played with Barbies as a kid and never imagined loving tech so much. But like you said she would’ve have been a very good influence in the earlier days especially at the time when I was growing up in the 80s and early 90s.
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#36 written by Dave 1 year ago
Look behind the relavence. Computer engineer Barbie is an angle to sell products. It doesn’t matter whether you type on a pink laptop with finely manicured nails, or a black laptop with errr!! let’s say nails that are not in as good condition, the result is the same. Gender is of no relevance. Being able to do the job IS!! If hardware is coloured specifically for women then so be it (I think it is a nice change).
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Hey, thanks for your comments on my article on Mashable today about Barbie! I enjoyed reading your blog post too
I was wondering — at the end where you said “I don’t know too many women in IT rocking the sparkly leggings and white leather vests to work at the office (unless…she’s from the future” — did you mean that coder Barbie’s outfit is futuristic, or that we’re not yet at a point where women would be able to dress like that in the workplace?
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Its odd to see barbie that beautiful. People make/want what they don’t have. Really? There is not enough beauty?Weird.
With other things I can understand BUT that too cuts into this.
Some thing is wrong and we need to find out what. And you Veronica for a number of reasons are the perfect person to tell us why.
So in other words you are beautiful.
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#41 written by Phillip 1 year ago
Growing up I had race cars, sailboats, and GI Joes as toys. I loved them, but I also loved to dress and re-dress my neighbor’s huge barbie collection. I studied fashion design in college, worked in the industry, and later taught fashion. (Presently I work as a video editor and webmaster). I think Barbie influenced my career path, at least in part. Not sure if that relates to this discussion, but for all of the feminists who like to speak out against Barbie- STFU because it can have a positive influence.
As for the race cars and sailboats? Formula One and Americas Cup are two of my favorite obsessions.
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I’ve had an issue as soon as I saw the pictures of the new Barbie. While it’s great that Mattel decided to give Barbie a CE character, she still wears pink outfits, carries a pink laptop and wears pink glasses – in other words, a very girlie girl. Its surprising how much the sexes are segregated and aware of their differences even from the earliest of childhood. Girls aren’t taught to understand “how stuff work”, and maths and science aren’t cool. Unless those things change, just having a CE barbie out there wont bring more girls to engineering..
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Nice article Veronica. I think technology and symbolizing it with Barbie would be a different thought in itself. When I was a kid, I was much obsessed with computers and sci-fi tech movies, dreaming that one day they will be creating something like iRobot or Terminator as well (haven’t done that so far, though
). Similarly, I believe the concept of encouraging computers with toys during childhood will make a remarkable impact when the kids grow up. I’m not a perfect writer, nor I’m from any journalist fraternity, but a programmer, and I tried to convey a similar message too when I was writing the article “Programming: Are you mad??” (http://atifsiddiqui.blogspot.com/2009/02/programming-are-you-mad.html). Indeed the author of Girls can’t be programmers (http://girlscantwhat.com/girls-cant-be-programmers) might take some motivation from you.Cheers, Happy Programming!
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#44 written by Pappaous 1 year ago
I cant argue that this type of marketing doesnt work. Maybe not as effective as it once was before Internet 2.0, but still works… I find it interesting about the target niche they are proposing. It doesnt take alot of thought or imagination to figure-out what they are shooting for. Quest has been way out on the bleeding edge with this. They never assigned an average or ugly girl to their big accounts, and the girls wouldnt last long, 2-3 years max. Interesting… So why not just go to the Playboy Manson and recruite right out from under Heffner? He is too far gone to notice, and with the advent of Cloud computing, SAAS, SOA, none of those girls couldnt fail to fool 90% of the customers. I guess it al boils down to the H2B problem. Set Qualifications to exaspirate domestic hireing and get your visa’a expanded. So, how would you go about showing a Playgirl is more qualified? Without blowing your cover…
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#50 written by Katie 1 year ago
Explain Veronica.. do i get this to spray on myself to get a guy? or does a guy spray this on himself? or does a gay guy spray it to get straight guys?
http://www.myfoxdfw.com/dpp/news/032210-New-Scent-Boasts-Vaginal-Aroma
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OMG, I thought that was iJustine! Rock on, Mattel. Rock on.