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Showing 121 to 135 of 336 results Save | Export
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Toukoushian, Robert K. – Research in Higher Education, 2000
Discusses methodology of gender equity studies on noninstructional employees of colleges and universities, including variable selection in the multiple regression model and alternative approaches for measuring wage gaps. Analysis of staff data at one institution finds that experience and market differences account for 80 percent of gender pay…
Descriptors: Colleges, Educational Finance, Employment Practices, Higher Education
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Arias, Omar; McMahon, Walter W. – Economics of Education Review, 2001
Uses Current Population Survey data to develop dynamic and expected rates of return to high school and college between 1967-95, considering effects of annual changes in institutional costs and real earnings within each age group. Dynamic college returns (for older age groups) exceeded 13 percent for both sexes. (Contains 49 references.) (MLH)
Descriptors: College Graduates, Education Work Relationship, Educational Attainment, High School Graduates
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Reason, Robert D.; Walker, David A.; Robinson, Daniel C. – NASPA Journal, 2002
The 1999-2000 NASPA Salary Survey was used to examine effects of gender, ethnicity, and highest degree earned on mean salaries of senior student affairs officers at four-year public institutions. Found that degree attainment and ethnicity significantly affected salaries, while gender did not, although women and people of color were not represented…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Ethnicity, National Organizations, National Surveys
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Belfield, C. R.; Beney, A. P. – Education Economics, 2000
Examines the scale and determinants of alumni giving, using datasets from two public-sector UK universities. Considers the importance of alumni giving as revenue and performance measures, comparing UK with U.S. alumni behaviors. Women are more likely to give; high-income grads, particularly lawyers, give greater amounts. (Contains 35 references.)…
Descriptors: Alumni, College Graduates, Foreign Countries, Higher Education
Figart, Deborah M. – 1988
Social and economic forces in the post-war era have lead to an increased commitment by women of all ages to the labor force. In contrast, the labor force participation rate for men has declined. With women's continued predominance in the service sector and jobs lost in the traditionally male manufacturing sector of the U.S. economy, men and women…
Descriptors: Comparable Worth, Employed Women, Employment Level, Employment Patterns
Staub, Kay – 1987
Discipline is generally recognized as among the more important determinants of faculty salary. Discipline differences in faculty salary are normally accepted at face value, assumed to be the result of market forces. (The same assumption is commonly made about wage differences among occupations.) This paper reports on findings from an analysis of…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Females, Higher Education, Institutional Research
Goldin, Claudia – New Perspectives, 1985
Despite the great influx of women into the labor market, the gap between men's and women's wages has remained stable at 40 percent since 1950. Analysis of labor data suggests that this has occurred because women's educational attainment compared to men has declined. Recently, however, the wage gap has begun to narrow, and this will probably become…
Descriptors: Comparable Worth, Educational Attainment, Employed Women, Employment Patterns
Rhee, Byung-Shik – 1997
This study examined salary discrimination by race and sex for faculty of higher education institutions. Data were obtained from the 1993 National Study of Postsecondary Faculty (NSOPF-93), a cross-sectional survey of 817 public and private higher education institutions and 25,780 faculty. The findings indicated that while the salary gap between…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Higher Education, Models, Predictor Variables
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Kimmel, Jean – Economics of Education Review, 1997
Examines racial and gender wage differences for rural workers, using wage equations derived from G.S. Becker's human capital model. With the rural focus, American Indian males and black females experience the weakest wage returns to education within their respective genders. Discrimination seems more prevalent in the rural female labor market,…
Descriptors: Blacks, Elementary Secondary Education, Racial Differences, Racial Discrimination
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Pike, Gary R. – Research in Higher Education, 1994
A study of University of Tennessee, Knoxville, graduates (n=828) at time of graduation and after two years found job satisfaction significantly positively correlated with ratings of the college experience. Women were less satisfied with their pay than were men but not more dissatisfied with the work or more likely to be looking for another job.…
Descriptors: Alumni, Compensation (Remuneration), Educational Attitudes, Graduate Surveys
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Rhames, Ronald L.; Floyd-Finch, Nancy; Kitchings, Dorcas A. – Journal of Applied Research in the Community College, 1996
Describes a study done at Midlands Community College in South Carolina to assess gender and race bias in staff promotion. Concludes that, although a cursory analysis shows bias in favor of white males, when the effects of time employed and grade are removed, there cease to be significant race and gender differences. Contains four data tables. (JDI)
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Comparative Analysis, Diversity (Institutional), Promotion (Occupational)
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Averett, Susan L.; Burton, Mark L. – Economics of Education Review, 1996
Examines gender differences in college attendance decisions, employing National Longitudinal Survey of Youth data. Uses a human-capital model stressing family characteristics and expected future earnings differential between college and high school graduates. The higher the college wage premium, the more likely men are to attend college. Women's…
Descriptors: College Attendance, College Graduates, Education Work Relationship, High School Graduates
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Ryan, Paul – Journal of Vocational Education and Training: The Vocational Aspect of Education, 1998
Economic data comparing apprenticeship to full-time vocational education and to the youth labor market suggests that, in advanced economies, apprenticeship is a source of more stable employment for young male adults. Its value for females is low in some countries. (SK)
Descriptors: Apprenticeships, Comparative Analysis, Economic Impact, Employment Level
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Walker, David – College and University, 2001
Using the 1999-2000 National Association of Student Personnel Administrators salary survey, analyses of covariance found that gender significantly affected salaries at public and private institutions, while ethnicity and highest degree earned were not statistically significant. An ordinary least squares regression analysis indicated that size of…
Descriptors: Ethnicity, Higher Education, Private Colleges, Public Colleges
National Committee on Pay Equity, Washington, DC. – 1990
Women have made slow, steady progress in the labor market since 1979, but the wage gap has not narrowed significantly. This briefing paper updates a September 1987 paper based on "Male-Female Differences in Work Experience, Occupations, and Earnings: 1984" (Current Population Reports, Household Economic Studies, Series P-70, No. 10, issued in…
Descriptors: Blacks, Economic Research, Employed Women, Equal Opportunities (Jobs)
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