Title: Women and Work
1Women and Work
2In Small Group
- Assume that you are an academic advisor at
SuperDuper College. A female junior level
student majoring in ____ comes to you and asks
for your advice on the career she is considering.
Answer the following questions in preparation
for your talk with her. - What is the average salary for a new recruit in
that field (give male and female salary
separately) - What is the average number of male and female
workers in that field. Is there gender
segregation? - List some potential challenges and opportunities
for a female in that field.
3An Interesting Topic
- By virtue of your college degree, you will/ are
likely enter the paid workforce - variety of issues you will face, so be prepared
- Today, more than 50 of women hold paying jobs,
so she is not an anomaly but the NORM
4Outline of Presentation
- History of Women and Work
- Where are we today
- Factors that affect women in the workplace
- How the wage gap affects salaries
- Effects of work on a womans personal life
5History of Women and Worksome info from Women
Working by Stromberg Harkness, 1988
- Women are not new to concept of work
- differences we see today were prompted by
industrial age - Colonial America-- work roles for men women
more equitable than today - frontier conditions, agrarian duties meant
everyone worked hard
6Colonial America
- Men and women had many shared activities, worked
as part of household economy, gender roles more
fluid - but tasks generally assigned by age and sex
- wives had exclusive responsibility for mgmt. of
household economy - women helped with bookeeping, supervised workers,
collected debts, ordered materials - men assumed discipline/soc. of children
7Colonial America
- Women typically had 7-9 children
- roles were physically demanding- made soap,
candles, fabric, clothes, chopped wood, prepared
meals, cared for children - many served as midwives, dispensed herbs
- all women operated under constraints of English
legal system
8English Law in America
- 3 basic assumptions about women
- women depended on men, this was necessary
proper - English law dictated that property mgmt. public
affairs best left to the man - interests of husband and wife were the same- so
whatever husband wanted was naturally what wife
wanted as well - Surest way to property was thru widowhood
9Industrial Era- early 1800s
- People moving Westward
- agriculture becoming commercialized
- Indust. Rev. dramatically changes relationship
of individuals to their work - work and home roles become more separate
- men increasingly work outside home for paid wage
- womens domestic work still exhausting but a
little better
10Industrial Era
- Women becoming more involved in socialization of
children - women also expected to attend to husbands
emotional as well as physical needs - gradual but perhaps biggest change
- the absence of men from the household also
reduced the social visibility of womens domestic
work
11The (de-) value of domestic work
- Women at home perceived to be in leisurely role
- men associated home with rest, relaxation, place
of seclusion from stress - because men didnt associate home with work, they
also failed to associate women with work
12Women and work during 1800s
- Yes, some women in paid labor force
- 1890 estimate to be 5
- most worked in textile factories
- those who remained in the home often took on
laundry, sewing, piecework for others - By end of 19th C. large corporations beginning to
form, govt. expands, increase in immigration,
transportation, communication
13Expansion of work roles
- Late 19th C. changes meant gradual increases in
work opportunities for women - greatest expansion 1890-1940
- women in clerical sales jobs
- 1900 - 8
- 1940 - 29
- women also move into teaching
- most opportunities only for white women
14Early- Mid 1900s
- Despite high unemployment rates, men did not
displace women employees. WHY? - Despite public ambivalence, women in workforce
rose rapidly after 1940s - WWI and WWII - mass media campaigns to get women
into traditional male jobs - then 1950s - mass media campaign to urge women
back into the home
15Mid- late 1900s
- 1950s and 1960s - social pressure to stay at
home, increase in childbirths (also marriages and
then divorces) - 1964 - Title 7 Equal Pay Act of Civil Rights Act
passes and reinforces women in work - since 1940s women increasingly entering the
workforce in all age brackets, with fastest
increase in 20-34 year-olds
16So Where Are We Today?
- 1st quarter 2002
- 54.1 million men and 42.9 million women (16
yrs) in the paid workforce - 70 men and 57 women in civilian labor force (US
Dept Labor Stats) - unemployment rate about 6 overall
- higher for women with children and minorities in
general. If interested go to
http//data.bls.gov/cgi-bin/surveymost?lf
17Factors that Affect Women in Workplace
- Stereotypes
- token employees
- queen bees
- Access Discrimination
- Evaluation Promotion Bias
- Job Leaves
- Sexual Harassment
- Occupational Segregation
- Salary Differentials
18Why do these factors occur?
- In large part because of our social construction
of gender!!
19The Wage Gap in 2000http//feminist.com/fairpay/f
actsheets.htm
- Women make 73 cents to mans dollar, hovered
between 70-74 cents thru 1990s - Median earnings
- men 37,339
- women 27,355
- Earnings for others as of White Men
- men women
- black 78 64
- Hispanic 63 52
- Asian 105 80
202 primary causes of Wage Gap
- Job Segregation - few jobs are held by 50 men,
50 women. Those held by women usually not
valued nor paid as highly - Entitlement - individuals sense of what s/he is
entitled to receive in pay. - Examples of entitlement theory by B. Major
21Sex-Segregated Occupations
- Over 80 female
- Secretaries, stenog 98
- Health care 85
- Financial Records 91
- Priv hshld maids 90
- Hairdressers, child care workers 83
- BLS (1990). Employment Earnings, 37(1), Table
20.
- Over 80 male
- Mechanics repairs 97
- Construction labor 97
- Engineers 92
- Health diagnosing 83
- Protective srvs 85
- Farm operatorsmgr 85
22http//www.apaclassics.org/profmat/PS2001_figure4.
html
23The Wage Gap By Education 2001 The following
avg.figures reflecting the median earnings in
2001for FT, YR workers, 25 yrs
Total H.S. Grad. Bachelor's
Master's ALL MEN 40,706 33,037
53,108 66,934 White
41,317 34,792 55,307
67,423 Black 32,180 27,422
42,999 51,336 Hispanic
26,502 26,944 44,778
60,661 Total H.S. Grad.
Bachelor's Master's ALL WOMEN
30,504 24,253 39,865
48,343 White 30,890
24,736 40,192 48,615 Black
27,351 22,341 36,253
43,884 Hispanic 22,192
21,600 34,060 46,169 Data
Source US Census Bureau, Current Population
Survey, March 2002, Table PINC-03 "Educational
Attainment" - People 25 years old and over by
total money earnings in 2001 'Work' experience in
2001, age, race, Hispanic origin and sex.
24- Women of Color in the Workplace
- The wage gap is most severe for women of color.
Consider these facts about the paychecks of black
and Hispanic women in the workplace - In one year, the average black woman earns
approximately 12,000 less than the average white
man does. Over a thirty-five year career, this
adds up to 420,000! - Black women account for 30 of all female-headed
families in the U.S. They have a median income of
18,244 annually, while families headed by white
males (no wife present) have a median income of
39,240. - In one year, the average Hispanic woman working
full-time earns 17,837 less than the average
white man does. Over a 30 -year career, that adds
up to 510,000! - Hispanic women with a high school diploma earn
22,469. That is 33 less than white men with the
same level of education. - From National Committee on Pay Equity Fact Sheets
25More stats on women work
- 1993 - women without HS degree earned 14,700,
compared to men at 21,402 - women with HS diploma earned 19,168, compared to
men at 26,820 - women-headed households are worst
- married couple 43,129
- male head, no wife present 29,849
- female head, no husb. Present 18,545
26BLS. http//www.stlcc.cc.mo.us/ccdocs/instres/ite
m5.htm
27Wage Gap by Education 1997 all FT workers, 25
yrs. (US DoL,Census Bureau)
- HSGrad BA/BS MA/MS Doctorate
- Men
- White 31,195 47,220 60,081 71,423
- Black 25,790 35,962 42,125 61,573
- Hisp. 24,021 37,725 44,702 42,082
- Women
- White 21,602 33,896 41,884 52,653
- Black 19,993 31,010 40,589 40,342
- Hisp. 19,247 31,993 41,554 55,956
281999 UD College Grads from UD Career Plans
Survey
- Male Female Ratio
- Agric. Sci. 33,905 25,667 0.76
- AS Human. 32,463 27,984 0.86
- AS Soc Sc. 29,694 26,538 0.89
- AS Life/Hlth. 30,000 27,827 0.93
- AS Phys. 35,504 34,331 0.97
- BE 36,215 33,049 0.91
- Engineering 41,211 41,993 1.02
- Hlth Nursing 24,458 33,370 1.36
- CHEP 27,527 28,470 1.03
- Average 34,336 30,170 0.88
292000-01 Faculty SalariesPublic 4-yr universities
- Male
- Asst Prof 46,859
- Assoc Prof 55,384
- Full Prof 78,083
- ACHE Survey Salaries.
- http//www.ache.state.al.us/00Abstract/TABLE38.pdf
- Female
- Asst Prof 43586
- Assoc Prof 49,185
- Full Prof 65,614
30Have women broken the glass ceiling yet?
- What factors affect the glass ceiling?
- See Table 7.2 in Hyde women are 6.6 executives,
minorities 2.6 - http//www.ilr.cornell.edu/library/e_archive/gov_r
eports/glassceiling/?pagehome - http//glass-ceiling.com/
31Global Connections of Poverty(B. Lott in Primis)
- Although women are 50 of population, they own
only 1 of worlds property and 10 of worlds
income - conditions of womens lives provide markers of
poverty and hunger - Women comprise two-thirds of the worlds
illiterate - even a little education for women pays dividends
in every index of social progress and development.
32Effects of Work on Womans Personal Life
- Marriage
- Household Tasks
- Children
- Personal Adjustment
33Marriage
- Employment delayed marriage for many
- Sure, its getting better but still the
predominant ideology is that mans job comes
first - i.e., job transfers - hard for some dual career couples women more
likely to choose job to fit family - 3 kinds of marriage
- traditional, modern, egalitarian
34Marital Bliss
- In general, marriage not as satisfying for women
- Jesse Bernard- studied mental physical hlth of
single and married men and women - found married men healthier, likelier to get
better-paying jobs higher pay than unm. - Married men commit fewer crimes, get fewer
traffic tickets, live longer than unm m. - married women - 2 to 3 x more likely to report
physical emotional problems
35Household Tasks
- Household chores generally not fun for most
- dissatisfaction with inequity in household tasks
perhaps one if not greatest difficulties - In 1971 38 men did little/no housework
- today changing, but after last 25 years still
not equal efforts - the double disadvantage
- women who work outside the home the most
dissatisfied with task division
36Household Tasks
- Keep in mind--housework generally not a seen, and
therefore not a valued task - J. Birnbaum (75) found homemakers to have lowest
SE (women who had BA) - social isolation, lack of reward for job well
done, financial dependence create feelings of
frustration, little control
37Children
- 1980s was 1st time more than 1/2 all mothers with
children under 6 yrs in labor force - much stress, guilt, mommy wars
- big debates about quality of child care
- 1993 Family Medical Leave Act
- time off can be costly for many years
38Children in Day Care
- Early research said separation of mother child
had negative effects - findings from early studies (some argue) based on
poor methods, biased samples, misleading
statements - other studies show preschoolers in day care not
signif. different from those at home - Belsky Steinberg (78) day care may
intellectually benefit some children
39Day Care
- Some argued that day care impersonal trtmnt,
aggressive behavior, more illness - others report day care children show better
social adjustment, no difference in later school
achievement, girls may have advantage seeing mom
role model, encourages independence, daughters of
working moms less gender stereotyped
40Personal Psychological Adjustment
- 2 hypotheses on women in work
- scarcity - work makes one feel tired,
overwhelmed, unable to do all tasks - enhancement - work gives one more energy
- certainly many experience role strain, but that
can be minimized (some good, some bad ways)
41Physical Health
- Role strain could lead to poor health, but some
studies show that employed women are healthier - WHY?
- Many find work mentally stimulating, encourages
social interaction, meet/work with people with
similar interests, increases self-esteem - read A. Hochschilds The Second Shift
42So whats the right answer?
- there is no perfect/right answer its an
individual decision - those women who can CHOOSE their role and
decision of whether or not to enter the paid
workforce are the happiest. - keep these points in mind as you enter or move to
next level of your career