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Women's Bureau (DOL), Washington, DC. – 1994
The Women's Bureau enlisted more than 1,600 partners to distribute a questionnaire asking women about their lives as workers. The partners included the following: more than 300 businesses, 900 grassroots organizations, 75 unions, daily newspapers, national magazines, and federal agencies in all 50 states, the Virgin Islands, Guam, and Puerto Rico.…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Employed Women, Employee Attitudes, Equal Opportunities (Jobs)
Congress of the U. S., Washington, DC. House Committee on Government Operations. – 1984
Testimony from a congressional oversight hearing on the Women's Bureau, a component of the U.S. Department of Labor, is presented. Concerns are the extent to which the general orientation of the administration has led to some diminution of activities of the sort the Women's Bureau has done in the past and the dismantling or reduction of the…
Descriptors: Adults, Advocacy, Career Education, Employed Women
Gottfredson, Gary D. – 1982
Although men and women work in jobs requiring approximately equal levels of education and in occupations with approximately equal prestige, working women earn only about 60% as much on the average as do working men. This disparity in income has important social consequences and is widely perceived as inequitable. One form of this type of…
Descriptors: Adults, Employed Women, Employees, Employer Employee Relationship
National Council of Women of Thailand. – 1977
Chachoengsao Province and Lampang Province were selected in 1976 as sites for an "action survey" to identify appropriate program areas for rural women so that governmental and voluntary agencies could be assisted in planning. During December 994 families and 1,272 women (ranging from 15-70 years old) were surveyed. Interviews were…
Descriptors: Credit (Finance), Developing Nations, Economic Opportunities, Employed Women
Duncan, Greg J., Ed.; Morgan, James N., Ed. – 1978
In trying to determine race and sex differences in earnings, some chapters in this volume examine the hypothesis that earnings differences are caused by skill differences. Findings indicate that skill differences cannot account for much of the earnings differences. Education levels required by various jobs are analyzed and compared to the actual…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Blacks, Economic Status, Educational Background
Geis, Sonia; Klein, Steven G.; Caroll, C. Dennis – 1997
Data from the 1980 Sophomore Cohort of the High School and Beyond (HS&B) study were used to examine the stability of the first employment experiences of high school diploma, associate's degree, and Bachelor's degree recipients. Approximately 51% of the original HS&B sophomore cohort were included in the study. Data used in the study were…
Descriptors: Education Work Relationship, Educational Attainment, Employed Women, Employment Experience
Burns, Jodi – 1996
All but 3-4% of the 91,189 complaints of alleged discrimination received by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in 1994 were dismissed for lack of sufficient proof of discrimination. A 1995 study of the extent of voluntary affirmative action found that 37% of a sample of 138 employers surveyed in the Philadelphia area had implemented steps…
Descriptors: Affirmative Action, Career Development, Employed Women, Employment Level
Hartmann, Heidi I. – 2000
Studies indicate these potential sources of wage differentials between women and men: women have different skills and qualifications; they work in the same jobs and establishments and have equal qualifications but receive unequal pay; and they work in different jobs or establishments, where pay is low, but have qualifications similar to men…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Comparable Worth, Educational Policy, Educational Research
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Taylor, Susan H. – Journal of Social Issues, 1989
Argues that comparable worth is a necessary and feasible remedy for the systematic, sex-related pay inequities found in contemporary work situations. Discusses equal opportunity legislation and its effects on conventional compensation practices. Discusses the simplicity of implementing comparable worth. Refutes arguments against its necessity and…
Descriptors: Civil Rights Legislation, Comparable Worth, Cost Estimates, Employed Women
McDaniel, Sue P., Comp.; Krauss, Robert, Comp. – 1991
This report provides statistical analysis of women in education and the work force in Missouri along with a list of the high growth occupations in Missouri. A chart shows that the percentage of high school graduates that are women has remained at about 50% for 10 years. Although there are noted decreases in the number of computer science,…
Descriptors: Comparable Worth, Demand Occupations, Employed Women, Employment Practices
Skelton, W. Keith; And Others – 1988
The fourth in a series of reports produced by the Education and Employment Statistics division of the American Insititute of Physics (AIP) is presented. Data are based on a stratified random sample survey of one-sixth of the U.S. and Canadian membership of the AIP member societies. In the spring of 1986, every individual in the sample received a…
Descriptors: Comparable Worth, Doctoral Degrees, Education Work Relationship, Employed Women
National Commission on Working Women, Washington, DC. – 1988
These four fact sheets address a number of issues relating to women in the work force. The first, "An Overview of Women in the Work Force," offers a look at the numbers of women in the labor force, the occupational categories represented by women workers, women in professional and nonprofessional occupations, and women in nontraditional…
Descriptors: Adults, Blacks, Career Education, Clerical Occupations
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Handley, Alice A.; Sedlacek, William E. – 1976
A random sample of 390 women employees of the University of Maryland, College Park (130 each from student, classified, and professional employees) were surveyed as to their characteristics and job attitudes. An 80 percent return was achieved, and results showed that the women generally are satisfied with their jobs and generally do not feel…
Descriptors: Attitudes, Committees, Decision Making, Employed Women
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Mellor, Earl F. – Monthly Labor Review, 1985
This report presents 1983 annual average weekly earnings of wage and salary workers (both men and women) who usually work full time (excluding the "incorporated self-employed") in more than 200 occupations, according to the classification system developed for the 1980 Census of Population. (Author)
Descriptors: Artists, Athletes, Clerical Occupations, Employed Women
Women's Bureau (DOL), Washington, DC. – 2000
To benefit from new millennium opportunities, women should take advantage of the burgeoning information technology revolution and growth in other mathematics- and science-based occupations. Among occupations, professional jobs will increase the fastest and add the most employment. Among industries, the computer and data processing services…
Descriptors: Administrators, Adult Education, Demand Occupations, Employed Women
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