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Børve, Hege Eggen – Early Child Development and Care, 2017
This article examines the impact on work culture when men work in kindergartens. In Norway, as in other countries there has been a call for more male staff in kindergartens. Increasing the amount of men may imply that institutionalized norms and practice are put under pressure. By using a case study approach, the focus is on employees' experiences…
Descriptors: Males, Kindergarten, Foreign Countries, Organizational Culture
Werhan, Carol R. – Journal of Family and Consumer Sciences, 2010
This study explores, within the framework of the literature on men in nontraditional occupations, why men choose to enter the gendered career field of family and consumer sciences (FCS) education and their experiences as FCS teachers. A better understanding of this contemporary phenomenon may facilitate men filling the national shortage of FCS…
Descriptors: Nontraditional Occupations, Family Life Education, Consumer Science, Males
Hickey, Andrew – Journal of Academic Librarianship, 2006
This study explores the perceptions of male librarians working in an academic library. Underpinning the methodology of this paper is a series of in depth interviews conducted over several years with a group of selected male librarians. This paper suggests that the meanings constructed by male librarians in the non-traditional work environment have…
Descriptors: Males, Librarians, Experience, Academic Libraries

Lemkau, Jeanne Parr – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 1984
Assessed personality and background features of men in female-dominated professions by comparing 54 men employed in atypical professions with 63 men employed in sex-typical fields. Results showed that the men, by virtue of having entered female-dominated professions, have common personality and background factors which differentiate them from…
Descriptors: Career Choice, Individual Differences, Males, Nontraditional Occupations
Perkins, Julia L.; And Others – Nursing and Health Care, 1993
Male nursing students surveyed (n=146, 69 percent) responded that (1) career attributes (job security, opportunity, flexibility) were primary reasons for choosing nursing; (2) they had moderate to high support from significant others; and (3) they were more likely to be older and single. (SK)
Descriptors: Career Choice, Enrollment Influences, Males, Nontraditional Occupations
Boughn, Susan – Nursing and Health Care, 1994
Using grounded theory, interviews with 12 males elicited themes for their choice of a nursing career: (1) desire to care for others; (2) practical motivations related to job security and salary; and (3) feelings of power and empowerment, related both to their being male in a female-dominated occupation and to critical care issues. (SK)
Descriptors: Career Choice, Helping Relationship, Males, Motivation
Stenberg, Laurie A.; Dohner, Ruth E. – Journal of Vocational Home Economics Education, 1993
Assistance with career goals and employment and positive role models were outcomes identified in interviews with 10 male home economics educators whose mentors were female. Half believed their mentors' expectations were the same for them as for other proteges. They experienced few problems typical of cross-gender mentoring. (SK)
Descriptors: Career Choice, Higher Education, Home Economics Education, Males
Rosenwasser, Shirley Miller; Patterson, William – 1984
Research indicates that the family roles of men are slowly changing, with a small minority of those sampled having primary childcare/household duties. To examine the background, life satisfaction, motives, and personality traits of such men, 16 married, male adults, whose wives were employed outside the home, and who had over 50% of the…
Descriptors: Adults, Family Characteristics, Homemakers, Life Satisfaction

Lease, Suzanne H. – Career Development Quarterly, 2003
Tests a model of men's nontraditional occupational choice, using a longitudinal sample of college-age men in both gender traditional and nontraditional occupations. Liberal social attitudes, degree aspirations, and socio-economic status were directly predictive of nontraditional career choice. (Contains 35 references and 2 tables.) (GCP)
Descriptors: Career Choice, Males, Models, Nontraditional Occupations

Chung, Y. Barry; Harmon, Lenore W. – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 1994
Holland's Self-Directed Search, a lifestyle questionnaire, and Bem Sex Role Inventory were completed by 63 gay and 60 heterosexual males. Gay men's career interests were less Realistic or Investigative and more Artistic/Social on Holland's scale; their aspirations were less traditional than heterosexuals'. Bem Femininity and Masculinity scores…
Descriptors: Homosexuality, Males, Nontraditional Occupations, Occupational Aspiration

Dillon, Linda S. – Journal of Vocational and Technical Education, 1986
The author surveyed the attitudes of 1,551 North Carolinians toward sexual discrimination and nontraditional work roles. Sixty-three percent of all respondents thought that women had not been treated equally with men in being allowed to earn enough money to support themselves independently. Women were significantly different than men in their…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Females, Males, Mothers

Culver, Steven M.; Burge, Penny L. – Journal of Vocational Education Research, 1985
This study examined the differences in the self-concept of students grouped according to their sex and the sex-intensiveness of their vocational programs. Students in programs nontraditional for their sex, regardless of their gender, held higher self-concepts than their counterparts in traditional programs. Males, on the whole, had more positive…
Descriptors: Females, Males, Nontraditional Education, Nontraditional Occupations

Root, Norman; Daley, Judy R. – Monthly Labor Review, 1980
Provides a comprehensive look at female work-related injuries and illnesses by occupation, industry, and specific characteristic of the injury. Most injury cases were accounted for by younger women employed in manufacturing industries. Women in traditionally male-dominated jobs suffer the same injuries with the same frequency as their male…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Females, Injuries, Males

Jome, LaRae M.; Tokar, David M. – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 1998
Fifty men classed as career-traditional tended to endorse antifemininity, toughness, homophobic attitudes, and restrictive emotionality compared to 50 career-nontraditionals. The groups did not differ in status norms, attitudes about work-family conflicts, or difficulties with success, power, and competition. (SK)
Descriptors: Career Choice, Emotional Response, Homophobia, Majors (Students)

Dohner, Ruth E.; And Others – Journal of Home Economics, 1990
A survey of 24 men holding home economics education degrees and working in the field determined the influences behind their nontraditional career choice. The men are concerned about the future of the field and leadership roles, and they feel that their presence serves as positive role models for males wishing to enter home economics. (SK)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Higher Education, Home Economics, Home Economics Teachers