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Rubin, Richard – Journal of Library Administration, 1986
Results from this survey show: (1) turnover rates--between 7 and 10 percent--are relatively low compared to those in other service fields; (2) although not statistically significant, female turnover rate was 66 percent higher than the male rate; and (3) males are more likely to resign for another position, females to leave the workforce. (CDD)
Descriptors: Career Change, Employed Women, Labor Force, Labor Turnover
Arkansas Advocates for Children and Families, Little Rock. – 1984
The major purpose of this paper is to increase employers' awareness of the impact that the rising number of working mothers has had on the need for day care in Arkansas as a whole and in their specific business locales. It is hoped that employers will be motivated to investigate and evaluate the advantages of providing some form of day care…
Descriptors: Day Care, Early Childhood Education, Employed Women, Employer Supported Day Care
Wieneke, Christine – Journal of Tertiary Educational Administration, 1995
Using 1990 survey data on New South Wales (Australia) universities, this study examined women's location and status within the organizational hierarchy. Results are reported and some issues surrounding women's relative absence in central decision-making management positions are explored. Discussion is set within the context of feminist research on…
Descriptors: Administrators, College Administration, Decision Making, Employed Women
Touhsaent, Susan M. – 1983
To facilitate planning of services to low income, single-parent working women with young children, a client impact study was made of former recipients of Aid to Dependent Children (ADC) in Monroe County, New York. Those surveyed had lost their supplementary income and related benefits due to mandated eligibility constraints in the federal Omnibus…
Descriptors: Coping, Economically Disadvantaged, Employed Women, Family Characteristics
Gardner, Philip D.; Jackson, Linda A. – 1990
This study was conducted to investigate the pay expectations of graduating seniors, and specifically, the relationship between gender and pay expectations for one's self and others. The main purpose of the study was to determine if women and men differed in their initial pay expectations. Surveys were received from 447 college seniors, including…
Descriptors: Attitude Measures, College Seniors, Comparable Worth, Comparative Analysis
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Martin, L. M. – Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management, 1996
Changes in women's participation in Australian higher education since the 1950s, primarily as employees, are examined in the context of policies and structures in place during that period. Factors influencing employment and promotion of women university employees are discussed, and action that could be taken at personal and system levels to…
Descriptors: Administrators, College Administration, College Faculty, Educational Change
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Bryant, Heather E.; And Others – Academic Medicine, 1991
Among 745 physicians graduated from the University of Calgary (Canada) women were more likely to take parental leave, but gender differences in breaks taken for other reasons were less. Women worked fewer hours in direct patient care. Female parents under 35 spent fewer hours on patient care than all male parents. (Author/MSE)
Descriptors: Careers, Clinical Experience, Employed Parents, Employed Women
Marshall, Catherine – 1987
This paper focuses on the role of language in understanding the inequality of male and female access to positions in educational administration. By applying techniques of sociolinguistics, the paper seeks to demonstrate the potential of the microanalysis of language for identifying the assumptions, norms, and values in the culture of school…
Descriptors: Administrator Qualifications, Anthropological Linguistics, Educational Administration, Elementary Secondary Education
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Patrick, Al; And Others – Issues in Education, 1985
Reviews historical and ideological roots that developed the teaching profession as a proper role for women. Includes research from a current study investigating the importance of domesticity in the personal and professional attitudes of male and female teachers and the general population of the state of Oklahoma. Includes 13 tables of data. (MD)
Descriptors: Data, Educational History, Educational Philosophy, Educational Research
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Swartzman, Leora C.; And Others – Canadian Journal of Higher Education, 1992
Salaries and promotion patterns in the social sciences faculty at a large Canadian university were examined for evidence of gender discrimination. No patterns of discrimination in promotion were found, and women were not more underrepresented in higher-salaried departments. Male and female faculty similar on salary-relevant variables were found to…
Descriptors: Academic Rank (Professional), Case Studies, Departments, Employed Women
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Ward, Patricia A.; And Others – Social Science Quarterly, 1992
Uses characteristic education, occupation, and job experience credentials of current elites in U.S. institutions to approximate the proportion of women in the pool of potential elites. Includes breakdowns for law, Ph.D. programs, managers, accountants, and M.B.A.s. Concludes that women's representation in elite positions is consistent with their…
Descriptors: Degrees (Academic), Employed Women, Employment Level, Employment Projections
Pavan, Barbara Nelson – 1987
To determine if women or men have lower aspiration levels for school administrative positions, male and female administrative certificate holders were asked for their ultimate career goal. The most frequent response was superintendent (36 percent), followed by elementary principal, out of education, and professor (12 percent for each choice). The…
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Administrators, Career Choice, Comparative Analysis
Pavan, Barbara Nelson – 1987
A survey of male and female school administrators in Pennsylvania reveals that sexual division of labor in household activities differs little from stereotypical role expectations. A survey, mailed to 1,324 male and female administrative incumbents and aspirants, yielded 622 responses for a rate of 47 percent. The survey explored personal…
Descriptors: Administrator Characteristics, Administrator Education, Administrator Role, Elementary Secondary Education
Knox, Josephine J. – 1983
This study was conducted to identify factors that affect disadvantaged women in their efforts to gain long-term employment or to complete vocational and technical education programs. Following a review of literature, a questionnaire was prepared and administered to 160 disadvantaged women in Texas. An analysis of the questionnaire responses…
Descriptors: Adults, Disadvantaged, Displaced Homemakers, Dropout Prevention
American Association of School Administrators, Arlington, VA. Office of Minority Affairs. – 1983
This report provides results from a survey of school districts headed by racial/ethnic minority and by women superintendents. The document contains three sections. Section 1, "Profiles of School Districts Headed by Women and Racial-Ethnic Minority Superintendents," outlines survey methods and identification of respondents. Characteristics of…
Descriptors: Administrators, Civil Rights, Elementary Secondary Education, Employed Women
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