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Logue, Barbara J. – Gerontologist, 1991
Used data from 1982 New Beneficiary Survey to examine financial stress in retirement for highly committed women workers. Separate regressions were conducted for married and unmarried women, with attention paid to impact of gender-segregated jobs. Results suggest relative importance of work history and sociodemographic variables as predictors of…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Financial Problems, Nontraditional Occupations, Poverty
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Read, Barbara K. – Journal of Career Development, 1994
Responses from 532 of 1,500 female technical college students in traditional training (280), nontraditional training (149), or gender-balanced (99) programs. Nontraditionals rated themselves higher on vocational self-efficacy, perceived opportunities, social support, and confidence. (SK)
Descriptors: Career Choice, Females, Motivation, Nontraditional Occupations
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Davey, F. Heather; Stoppard, Janet M. – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 1993
Factors related to occupational choice were investigated for 180 female high school students. Influence of significant others and cost of education for expected occupation were distinguishing factors between students who expected to enter desired occupations and those who expected to enter occupations more traditional than they desired. (SK)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Females, High Schools, Nontraditional Occupations
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Glover, Judith; Fielding, Jane – Journal of Education and Work, 1999
Analysis of British national data sets shows that, although women's representation in the sciences increased, occupational outcomes differ for men and women. Women are much more likely to be underemployed and are overrepresented in teaching. Labor-market policies, as well as education policies, need attention. (Author/JOW)
Descriptors: Employment Level, Females, Foreign Countries, Graduate Surveys
Atkinson, Maxine P.; Boles, Jacqueline – 1982
For the past decade dual-earner marriages in which wives are junior partners have been a major topic in marriage and family literature. In marriages which consider wives as senior partners (WASPs), however, the wife's career is emphasized. In an effort to study the rewards and costs of WASP marriages and to discover the structural conditions under…
Descriptors: Coping, Dual Career Family, Employed Women, Family Income
Mazen, A. Magid – 1985
Research on women in atypical occupations has generally focused on highly educated women and has neglected to compare atypically employed women to equally educated women in sex-typical occupations. Since the median American worker has only 13.6 years of schooling, the lack of research on the personality characteristics of noncollege-degreed women…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Femininity, Individual Differences, Nontraditional Occupations
Stickel, Sue A.; Bonett, Rhonda M. – 1989
The results of a study of the self-efficacy of 59 male and 71 female students, at a midsized western university, using a psychometric assessment instrument called the Career Attitude Survey (CAS) developed for the study, may be summarized as follows: (1) females but not males exhibited greater self-efficacy for traditional female occupations than…
Descriptors: Attitudes, Career Choice, Career Planning, Higher Education
Moore, Kathryn M.; Veres, Helen C. – 1979
The characteristics and objectives of women college students are examined as they relate to career choice and development. Data were obtained from students at four two-year colleges in New York City. Career innovators comprised one-fifth of the women in the sample, and aspired to a wide range of occupations in managerial and professional fields.…
Descriptors: Career Choice, Career Development, Counselor Role, Females
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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
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Yoder, Janice D.; And Others – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 1985
An analysis of a sample of exit interviews from the first women cadets to graduate from West Point (N=62) revealed that the marginal peer acceptance of tokens within a competitive, somewhat constrained atmosphere discouraged the development of sponsorships. (Author/BL)
Descriptors: College Students, Females, Higher Education, Mentors
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Fassinger, Ruth E. – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 1985
A model of women's career choice was tested using the structural equation modeling methodology. The final model tested suggests high-ability feminist women, who are achievement oriented, appear to be strongly career oriented and quite strongly family oriented. This career-family orientation appears to lead to career choices that are high in…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Career Choice, College Students, Females
Pryor, Robert G. L. – Vocational Guidance Quarterly, 1985
Initiation and outcome of a program designed to promote trade work among women is outlined and analyzed in light of occupational aspiration. Results indicate that the program increased the frequencies of women entering nontraditional trades. However, an employment slump curtailed its impact, highlighting the relevance of occupational compromise…
Descriptors: Career Development, Females, Nontraditional Occupations, Occupational Aspiration
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Lemkau, Jeanne Parr – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 1983
Compared 64 women in atypical professions with 71 women in sex-typical professions. Results suggested those in atypical professions were more likely to be firstborn, with employed mothers, and to mention positive influences of men on their careers. Factors related to atypical choice may relate to academic achievement. (JAC)
Descriptors: Background, Career Choice, Employed Women, Individual Differences
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Steward, Margaret S.; And Others – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 1983
Interviewed 50 women who chose a male-dominated career, the ministry, about career choice and professional development including role models and educational experiences. Findings indicated a complex interaction of sex and function of role models with age and sex-role orientation of subjects. (JAC)
Descriptors: Career Choice, Clergy, Employed Women, Nontraditional Occupations
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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
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