BarkoNaomiEBSCO_AspAmerican ProspectBarko, Naomi. 2000. "The Other Gender Gap." The American Prospect, June 19-July 3: 61-63.
Failure to pay adequate attention to the other gender gapposes many challenges for colleges. Many admissions officers fear that institutions reach a tipping point when the number of female students exceeds 60 percent; then, enrollments fall for women as well as men. Gender gaps, in short, matter...
Define The Generation Gap. The Generation Gap synonyms, The Generation Gap pronunciation, The Generation Gap translation, English dictionary definition of The Generation Gap. tr.v. gen·er·at·ed , gen·er·at·ing , gen·er·ates 1. a. To bring into be
gen′der gap` n. the difference between women and men in regard to social, political, economic, or other attainments or attitudes, or the problem perceived to exist because of such difference. [1980–85] Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyri...
(NHH). It also found a gender gap: female students enrolled in the NHH’s only undergraduate programme were 18 percentage points less likely to use ChatGPT often. When the researchers separated students by admission grades, it became clear that the ...
[4] The wealth gap between men and women also requires scrutiny, as property and other assets become an increasingly important source of financial security, particularly in old age. Research for the 2020 Commission on a Gender-Equal Economy found that women in their early 60s with private pensio...
For three months, they held more jobs than men in the US economy — something that had only occurred one other time in history, during a short period in 2009 and early 2010. Sure, there were still many other gender gaps: women were more likely than men to work part-time, for example...
Gender Differences in Competitiveness Bonte, W. and M. Piegeler (2012): Gender differences in competitiveness, risk tolerance, and other personality traits: Do they contribute to the gender gap in entrepreneurship? Paper presented at IZA Workshop: New Directions in the ... R Böheim,DominikGr...
1.The“gender gap”in pay is a widely recognized fact.Even as recently as 1994,women who worked full time year round(that is,more than 35 hours per week for 42 weeks per year)earned only 72 percent as much as men.What could account for this discrepancy?
The Gender Gap. Part Two: Empirical Evidence You can read the first part in this series of posts here. It talks about the economic explanat..