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Woodfield, Ruth – Studies in Higher Education, 2011
This article analyses a recent cohort (2006) of UK graduates, and explores the previously neglected relationship between age and post-degree employment. Much work on mature students assumes their overall experience to be one of disadvantage relative to traditional-age graduates, and this includes employability research. Here, mature students are…
Descriptors: Adults, Disadvantaged, Labor Market, College Graduates
Scully, Maura King – CURRENTS, 2011
Advancement is a women-dominated profession. The numbers say so: Approximately two-thirds of Council for Advancement and Support of Education (CASE) members are women, and one-third are men. What does this mean for women and the advancement profession as a whole? As anyone who has ever analyzed statistics can tell, it depends. The numbers…
Descriptors: Females, Gender Differences, Disproportionate Representation, Women Administrators
Lumby, Jacky; Azaola, Cristina – Australian Journal of Education, 2011
South Africa presents a distinctive and varied context in which to explore the experience of women principals. The article draws on a larger data set to explore the interplay of gender and school size in seven schools with 200 students or fewer. From this study, we conclude that gender remains a potent influence on the career and experience of…
Descriptors: Females, School Size, Foreign Countries, Social Capital
Corbett, Christianne; Hill, Catherine – American Association of University Women, 2015
During the 2014 White House Science Fair, President Barack Obama used a sports metaphor to explain why we must address the shortage of women in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM), particularly in the engineering and computing fields: "Half our team, we're not even putting on the field. We've got to change those…
Descriptors: Females, STEM Education, Success, Disproportionate Representation
Corbett, Christianne; Hill, Catherine – American Association of University Women, 2015
During the 2014 White House Science Fair, President Barack Obama used a sports metaphor to explain why we must address the shortage of women in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM), particularly in the engineering and computing fields: "Half our team, we're not even putting on the field. We've got to change those…
Descriptors: Females, STEM Education, Success, Disproportionate Representation
Lester, Jaime; Bers, Trudy – New Directions for Community Colleges, 2010
Community colleges are generally more inclusive to female faculty as compared to four-year institutions. Women represent 49 percent of fulltime and 50 percent of part-time community college faculty, a stark contrast to the low numbers of female faculty in four-year institutions. Female faculty at community colleges also receive similar rates of…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Women Faculty, Females, Intellectual Disciplines
Mangan, Katherine – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
Engineering and teaching are among the most lopsided disciplines in academe's gender split. In 2010, women received 80 percent of the undergraduate degrees awarded in education, the U.S. Education Department reports. And they earned 77 percent of the master's and 67 percent of the doctoral degrees in that field. In engineering, by contrast, women…
Descriptors: Females, Spatial Ability, Majors (Students), Gender Discrimination
Martin, Cynthia L. – ProQuest LLC, 2011
While years of effort to attract more women into higher education careers in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (collectively known as STEM disciplines) has shown some success, retaining women faculty once they are hired has been much less successful. Their retention is essential in order to maintain diversity among faculty.…
Descriptors: Careers, Higher Education, Women Faculty, Females
Abele, Andrea E.; Spurk, Daniel – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2011
This study investigated the impact of gender, the gender-related self-concept (agency and communion), and the timing of parenthood on objective career success of 1,015 highly educated professionals. Hypotheses derived from a dual-impact model of gender and career-related processes were tested in a 5-wave longitudinal study over a time span of 10…
Descriptors: Mothers, Program Effectiveness, Parents, Gender Differences
Henderson, Karla A.; Harrolle, Michelle; Rich, Samantha; Moretz, Janell – Schole: A Journal of Leisure Studies and Recreation Education, 2012
Women represent growing numbers of faculty members in higher education as well as in recreation/leisure departments. The purpose of this study is to describe the career development of women faculty in recreation-related areas and to offer implications for faculty development and the preparation of future faculty. Data were collected from women who…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Women Faculty, Females, Job Satisfaction
Hunt, Jennifer – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2010
I use the 1993 and 2003 National Surveys of College Graduates to examine the higher exit rate of women compared to men from science and engineering relative to other fields. I find that the higher relative exit rate is driven by engineering rather than science, and show that 60% of the gap can be explained by the relatively greater exit rate from…
Descriptors: Engineering, Technical Occupations, Females, Incidence
Dinovitzer, Ronit; Reichman, Nancy; Sterling, Joyce – Social Forces, 2009
This article seeks to identify the mechanisms underlying the gender wage gap among new lawyers. Relying on nationally representative data to examine the salaries of lawyers working fulltime in private practice, we find a gender gap of about 5 percent. Identifying four mechanisms--work profiles, opportunity paths and structures, credentials, and…
Descriptors: Credentials, Females, Salary Wage Differentials, Lawyers
Chan, Anita Kit-wa – History of Education, 2012
The feminisation of teaching is an important topic in education and gender studies. Discussions have been enriched by comparative and international studies as well as a gendering perspective in which a complicated view of the role of the state has emerged. In colonial Hong Kong, although the government was limited in its support of teacher…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Foreign Policy, Teaching (Occupation), Females
Darrah, Marjorie; Hougland, James; Prince, Barbara – Research in Higher Education Journal, 2014
How can universities be more successful in recruiting and promoting the professional success of women in their science-related departments? This study examines selected pieces of the puzzle by examining actual salary and space allocations to 282 faculty members in the science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) and the social and…
Descriptors: Females, Equal Opportunities (Jobs), STEM Education, Colleges
De Young, Alan J. – European Education, 2012
Elevating the status of women was among the primary Soviet objectives in Central Asia. One way of achieving this was to create a new profession--school teaching--that would become an important career for them. Newly minted women professionals were scientifically trained in pedagogical institutes, then placed in the growing number of secondary…
Descriptors: Females, Ethnography, Foreign Countries, Participant Observation