Does gender difference concern women’s career or work path Is today’s workplace essentially the same for women as it is for men
Important gender differences remain when it came to career choice
and development. For one thing, most women still subordinate their career goals
to their husbands. This is even the case with academically gifted women. If a married man wants or needs to move
to another job, his wife typically follows him and takes the best job she can
find in the new location. Hence, married women usually have less control over
their career than married men do. The high divorce rate means that many women
will have to provide for themselves and their children. One study reported that
after a divorce, the woman’s standard of living drops 27 percent. Today’s women
need to take these factors into account as they consider their career Options.
Another gender difference concerns career paths. Men’s Career
paths are usually continuous, whereas women’s tend to be discontinuous. In
other words, once men start working full time, they usually continue to work.
Women are more likely to interrupt their careers to concentrate on childrearing
or family crises. Still, because women are having fewer children and are
returning to work sooner, the amount of time they are out of the work is
decreasing. Research says that work discontinuity is a factor in women’s lower
salaries and status, while others fail to find a “family penalty” women who do not have a children usually
remain in the work and tend to have a pattern of career advancement.
Work is an activity that
produces something of value for others. Recent years have seen a dramatic
upsurge in the number of females in the workplace. Is today’s workplace
essentially the same for women as it is for men? In many respects, the answer
appears to be NO. Although job discrimination on the basis of gender has been
illegal for more than 30 yrs, women continue to face obstacles to occupational
success, as evidenced by recent court decisions that found few of the MNC
guilty of sex discrimination. Foremost among these obstacles is job
segregation. Jobs are simultaneously typed by gender. Most women tend to be
concentrated in female dominated jobs where there is little opportunity for
advancement or increase in salary. Workers in female dominated fields typically
earn less than employees in male dominated fields, even when the jobs require
similar levels of training, skill, and responsibility.
Still, more women are
entering higher status occupations, even it at a low rate. Unfortunately, they
still face discrimination because they are frequently passed over for promotion
in favor of men. This seems to be a problem especially at higher levels of
management.
When there is only one woman in an office, she becomes a token or a symbol of all
women community; Tokens are more distinctive than men. Distinctiveness makes a
person’s actions subject to intense scrutiny, stereotyping, and judgments. Thus
if a man makes a mistake, it is explained as an individual problem. When a
token woman makes a mistake, it is seen as evidence that members of female
community are incompetent. Hence, women experience a great deal of performance
pressure, an added source of job stress. Interestingly, if women are perceived
as being “too successful” they may be labelled “workaholics” or may be accused of trying to “show up” members of that community. These
unfavorable perceptions may be reflected in performance appraisals. The
performance of successful men is less likely to be interpreted in these
negative ways. Another way the world of work is different for women is that
they have less access to same gender or same group role models and mentors.
Finally, sexual harassment is much more likely to be a problem for working
women than for working men. Women face discrimination on the job in a number of
forms. Negative
feelings about affirmative
action prompt some to automatically assume that all women co workers have been
hired only because of their gender. Obviously, these assumptions can be quite
harmful to an employee’s success. For instance, several studies have
demonstrated that attaching an affirmative action label to an employee results
in negative attribution and perceptions of incompetence. The good news is that
this potential negative effect can be eliminated when people know that
decisions are based on merit as well as on group membership.
Women before you enter the working world, it’s important to get your
bearings women either should make her work a way to earn a living OR a way of life. And make yourself aware of six important
trends:
·
Technology is changing the nature of work. Digital workplace
demands more education and skills than were previously required, so keep
upgrading yourself in terms of technology skills.
·
New
work attitudes are required. In the new work environment the key to job success are self
direction, self management, up to date knowledge and skills, flexibility, and
mobility.
·
Lifelong
learning is a necessity. Workers
who know “how to learn” will be able to keep pace with the rapidly changing
work place and will be highly valued. Those who cannot will be left behind.
·
Independent workers are increasing. Just thrive on contract work which have freedom, flexibility
and high income. But for this you need to have skills and entrepreneurial
spirit. Lack of this may cause risk and stressful work experience and that’s
why many employees prefer to work for someone else than to work for themselves.
·
The
highest job growth will occur in the professional and service occupations. Yesterday’s jobs were in manufacturing,
construction, agriculture and mining. Now among the professional occupations,
jobs in the computer and health care industries, in education (at all levels),
social services, and business services.
Women must move and look
beyond gender differences in their career
or work.
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