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Rader, Martha H. – Public Personnel Management, 1979
Evaluates the effects of a management development program in which women administrators, professionals, and supervisors received training for upward career mobility. Assertiveness and attitudes toward women significantly improved for administrators and professionals but significantly declined for the supervisors. (Author/IRT)
Descriptors: Administrators, Employed Women, Females, Government Employees
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Dawson, Janis – Children's Literature in Education, 2003
Contends that attention to Louisa May Alcott's portrayal of domesticity has meant that her representation of working women has received little consideration. Proposes that Alcott's image of domesticity is underpinned by her experience as a working woman. Examines the foundations of Alcott's domestic ideal by focusing on the experiences of Alcott's…
Descriptors: Characterization, Critical Reading, Employed Women, Gender Issues
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Anme, Tokie; Segal, Uma A. – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2007
With increasing numbers of women joining the evening/nighttime workforce, there is a need for quality childcare during these hours. This project, conducted in Japan, sought to compare the effects of expanded childcare on the development and adaptation of 866 young children after one year. Parents completed a survey on the childrearing environment…
Descriptors: Self Efficacy, Multiple Regression Analysis, Foreign Countries, Family Environment
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Joesch, Jutta M.; Maher, Erin J.; Durfee, Alesha – Early Childhood Research Quarterly, 2006
Many extant studies on the use of non-parental child care are based on data from the youngest child in the household. To date, it has not been addressed whether this approach introduces bias. We present reasons why child care arrangements for youngest children may differ from those of same-age older children and examine whether the use of child…
Descriptors: Child Care, Toddlers, Preschool Children, Birth Order
Merrick, Beverly G. – 1989
The rise to prominence of the women's suffrage movement in the World War I years brought women reporters into U.S. newsrooms for the first time. In 1911 Emma Bugbee became the first woman hired as a "hard" news reporter for the "New York Tribune" (later the "Herald Tribune"). Ishbel Ross, author of "Ladies of the…
Descriptors: Biographies, Employed Women, Feminism, Journalism History
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Haller, Cynthia R. – Technical Communication Quarterly, 1997
Explores how an understanding of the nature and purposes of reports may help women gain recognition for accomplishments, both in conventional business settings and within feminized professions and spheres of activity. Uses a case study of report writing in a club to illustrate how work reports can provide a vehicle for elevating the perceived…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Communication Research, Employed Women, Females
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Nomaguchi, Kei M. – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2006
This study examines the relationships between maternal employment, nonparental care, mother-child interactions, and preschoolers' outcomes. Data from the Canadian National Longitudinal Survey of Children and Youth (N = 1,248) show that maternal employment during the previous year, especially full-time employment, was related to care by…
Descriptors: National Surveys, Mothers, Employed Women, Child Care
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Acker, Sandra; Dillabough, Jo-Anne – Gender and Education, 2007
This article reflects an interest in exposing links between women's academic work and the gender codes which organize and shape working life in the university context, both now and in the recent past, as a contribution to the sociology of women's work. Our specific focus is the gendered division of labour in teacher education in universities in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teacher Educators, Employed Women, Women Faculty
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Lopoo, Leonard M. – Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 2005
Over the last 30 years, the tenet of promoting self-sufficiency through work has become one of the primary objectives of many social welfare policies in the United States. Using the Panel Study of Income Dynamics, the author asks if a mother's work hours influence her daughter's teenage fertility. The findings suggest a negative relationship, with…
Descriptors: Mothers, Employed Women, Daughters, Early Parenthood
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Loveland, James M.; Buboltz, Walter C.; Schwartz, Jonathan; Gibson, Gina – Career Development Quarterly, 2006
A review of the content of "The Career Development Quarterly" ("CDQ") was conducted for the period between 1994 and 2003. In total, 297 articles were published in "CDQ" during this period. The content analysis was based on content, authorship, and institutional affiliation. The principal areas of research were career development: life-span…
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Career Development, Research, Classification
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Reinharz, Shulamit – Educational Horizons, 1986
The author states that American women have become divided into two groups--those who subscribe to a philosophy of gender differentiation, and those who subscribe to a philosophy of gender irrelevance. She pursues these differing philosophies in light of women's career transitions. (CT)
Descriptors: Career Change, Career Choice, Employed Women, Females
Stansbury, Kendyll; Warner, Linda Sue; Wiggins, Thomas – 1984
This paper looks at six theoretical approaches for understanding the underrepresentation of women in leadership positions and examines the theories' implications for affirmative action. The theories are as follows: (1) motivational and attitudinal models; (2) sex-role socialization; (3) sex-typed jobs and internal labor markets; (4) the constraint…
Descriptors: Affirmative Action, Educational Administration, Employed Women, Leadership
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Fullerton, Howard N., Jr. – Monthly Labor Review, 1980
In a look ahead at the 1995 labor force, all three projections--high, middle, and low--indicate that women will account for two-thirds of the growth, most of which will occur in the prime working-age group; the Black labor force will grow twice as fast as the White. (CT)
Descriptors: Black Employment, Demography, Employed Women, Employment Projections
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Tsai, Wehn-Jyuan; Liu, Jin-Tan; Chou, Shin-Yi; Thornton, Robert – Economics of Education Review, 2009
Between 1968 and 1973 the Taiwanese government undertook the most extensive expansion on record of the public junior high school system in Taiwan. This study analyzes the effects of the 1968 education reform and subsequent high school expansion on gender disparities in employment generally, as well in different sectors and classes of employment.…
Descriptors: School Expansion, Junior High Schools, Educational Change, Foreign Countries
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Craig, Christine; And Others – International Labour Review, 1985
A summary of evidence from a study of payment structures in six industries in three local labor markets in the United Kingdom is used to show that the conditions under which labor is made available exert an influence on wages that is relatively independent of the skill, experience, and effort of the workers concerned. (Author/CT)
Descriptors: Economic Climate, Employed Women, Labor Force, Labor Market
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