Our eldest studied science at uni, she was just as good as the guys. Likewise at school she was in the woodwork class and top of the class!
Is she still in a science based career? If not, you might want to consider why not (and I'm assuming it's not because she wasn't any good at it).
You can't assume any such thing! You know nothing of her or her abilities; and you cannot base what you say on:
"she was just as good as the guys," which is just a mother's opinion, and she's not going to rubbish her own daughter.
I'm tired of the double standards atheists on here have. Every comment from theists is challenged, and evidence demanded. Yet atheists make casual comments like yours, without any way of substantiating them. Hypocrites!
Calm down dear, it's only an anecdote.
Single anecdotal evidence doesn't tell us anything really about the big picture, although it may align if we understand the big picture.
So Floo's daughter might have gone on to a glittering career in science, ended up as a Nobel prize winner etc, but that still wouldn't tell us whether or not there is a problem with women entering and then progressing in careers in the science profession. In order to know that you need to look at proper data, not just anecdote. So to determine the proportion of women studying science at a level, and then at university. And the proportion of women at the various levels of seniority in the scientific career path. And what this shows in that at each more senior level you tend to get a smaller and smaller proportion of women. The reasons are complex but the trend is clear.
And although Floo's anecdote isn't full evidence it does align rather well. A girl who did science at levels and was successful and committed enough to study science at university, but then chose to move out of a direct career as a professional scientist, but into teaching instead, and from their out of science altogether.