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Loury, Linda Datcher – Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 1997
Analysis of National Longitudinal Survey and of High School and Beyond data pinpoints the reason for a decline in the gender earnings gap, 1979-86 among college-educated workers. Changes in estimated effects of college grades and major for women account for almost all of the decline, indicating growth in the market price of women's skills. (SK)
Descriptors: College Graduates, Employed Women, Grades (Scholastic), Higher Education

Williams, Patricia B. – Journal of Medical Education, 1978
Studies are cited that suggest women physicians' productivity is increasing and men physicians' is decreasing over the past two decades. A higher percentage of women physicians are practicing longer hours for more years than in the past. (LBH)
Descriptors: Employed Women, Employment Patterns, Females, Higher Education

Napholz, Linda – Journal of Employment Counseling, 1995
Compares level of work role commitment with indexes of psychological well-being among multiple-role working women. Results indicate that women who tried to participate in work and relationship roles equally or chose work over relationships experienced significantly higher levels of depression. (JPS)
Descriptors: Employed Women, Higher Education, Life Satisfaction, Mental Health

Pistole, M. Carole – Initiatives, 1994
Notes that, although they are qualified and are being hired into academic positions, women are not achieving tenure and promotion at same rate as men. Suggests that women's success can be affected by effective, purposeful mentoring and proposes framework that mentors can use to organize socialization and developmental process which women…
Descriptors: Career Ladders, College Faculty, Employed Women, Higher Education

Eisenberg, Carola – Journal of Medical Education, 1983
Characteristics of women physicians are determined primarily by their professional education, socialization into medical roles, and the organization of their practices. They more nearly resemble men physicians in professional attributes than they do other women in the population. Yet changes in admissions, curriculum, and rewards are necessary to…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Females, Higher Education, Individual Characteristics
Critz, Doris – CASE Currents, 1980
It is proposed that as the proportion of women in the labor force grows, women will be better donors to colleges and universities; at the same time, women volunteers can be an important asset to fund-raising activities. Tips for fund raising by and from women are given. (MSE)
Descriptors: Alumni, Employed Women, Females, Fund Raising

Hollon, Charles J.; Gemmill, Gary R. – Educational Administration Quarterly, 1976
Female teaching professionals report experiencing less perceived participation in decision-making, less job involvement, less overall job satisfaction, and more job-related tension than do their male counterparts. (Author)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Decision Making, Employed Women, Higher Education
Michel, Jean – 1988
Engineering in higher education has the lowest proportion of women students when compared with other fields of study. This book discusses the issues and problems that face the training and promotion of women at the university level. Part one discusses the background and trends of female participation in different regions and disciplines of higher…
Descriptors: College Science, Employed Women, Engineering Education, Engineers
Anselmi, Dina L.; Smith, Kathleen M. – 1984
While women are more involved in work outside the home and changes in traditional role orientations are occurring, the nature and extent of such changes remain unclear. A questionnaire was administered to 126 male and 94 female college students to examine their career, marriage, and family expectations. The results indicated that although career,…
Descriptors: Careers, College Students, Employed Women, Expectation
Gambone, Kirsten; Rowles, Dorothy; Szuchyt, Jamie; Deitrick, Susan; Gelband, Amy; Lu, Barbara Chris; Zohe, Dorothy; Stickney, Deborah; Fields, Susan; Chambliss, Catherine – 2002
This study examined the attitudes of male and female college students regarding maternal employment and their own career and family expectations. Perceptions of the benefits and costs associated with maternal employment were assessed through the Beliefs about the Consequences of Maternal Employment for Children (BACMEC) questionnaire (E.…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Career Planning, College Students, Employed Parents

Tillman, Randi S. – Journal of Dental Education, 1992
A workshop on female dentists in management is summarized. Topics included female dentists' experience in a predominantly male profession, rejection of feminism as a political movement, need to improve female dentists' opportunities, and gender differences in management style. An evolution in women's issues since the 1960s is seen. (MSE)
Descriptors: Business Administration, Dentists, Employed Women, Equal Opportunities (Jobs)
Chambliss, Catherine; Downie, Denise – 1992
Recent Census Bureau statistics indicate that the two-paycheck family is now the norm, even among families with young children. This study examined the effects during their childhood on their own career and family expectations of college students' (N=170) mothers' employment status. Subjects were divided into three groups on the basis of maternal…
Descriptors: Adult Children, College Students, Dual Career Family, Employed Parents

Bird, Gloria W. – Journal of the National Association of Women Deans, Administrators, and Counselors, 1984
Examined family and career characteristics of 112 married women and men administrators. Data indicated that although women and men administrators reported using similar role-management strategies, women considered their careers to be significantly more time demanding. Women married younger, had fewer children, and earned less salary than male…
Descriptors: Administrator Characteristics, Careers, College Administration, Coping
Barnett, Rosalind Chait; Gareis, Karen C.; James, Jacquelyn Boone; Steele, Jennifer – 2001
Recent research suggests that working men experience as much work-family conflict as women do. More men are doing housework and childcare, and feel that family is as important as their work. An attempt was made to determine how college seniors view their potential for managing work-family conflict. College students (N=324) attending a private…
Descriptors: College Seniors, Employed Women, Family Influence, Family Work Relationship

Chemical and Engineering News, 1983
Highlights National Research Council report ("Climbing the Ladder II: An Update on the Status of Doctoral Women Scientists and Engineers"). Indicates that, although supply of women with doctorates in science is up 50 percent in the past four years, salary and tenure problems are continuing. (JN)
Descriptors: College Science, Employed Women, Employment, Engineering Education