NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Showing 241 to 255 of 452 results Save | Export
Ekstrom, Ruth B. – 1981
This counselor's guide is part of the HAVE (Homemaking and Volunteer Experience) Skills materials designed to help women identify the job-relevant skills they have learned as homemakers and volunteers and to match those skills with paid jobs. The main purpose of this is to help counselors work with women who are entering paid work after spending…
Descriptors: Career Counseling, Counselors, Employed Women, Employment Qualifications
Repetti, Rena L. – 1980
The single most reliable finding in the literature on depression is that women are more likely than men to report and show signs of depressive symptomatology. A distribution of depression scores was analyzed for community women as a function of two factors: employment status, i.e., housewives versus employed women, and social class. The…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Depression (Psychology), Employed Women, Employment Level
Danziger, Sheldon – 1978
The distribution of family incomes is now slightly more equal than the distribution of husbands' earnings. Movements toward equal opportunity for women are likely to have only a small effect on family income inequality. In a world with no differences by sex in work behavior, we could expect that the work experience of women and men and the…
Descriptors: Blacks, Employed Women, Employment Experience, Employment Patterns
De Sola-Nielson, Linda – 1977
A questionnaire was developed to explore the relationships between job satisfaction, health, drug use (especially, the use of psychoactive drugs), and life satisfaction. The questionnaire was completed by 140 women between the ages of 21 and 65, of whom 52 were homemakers and 85 were employed (the remaining reported themselves as students).…
Descriptors: Drug Abuse, Drug Use, Employed Women, Health
Ahlschwede, Margrethe P. – 1970
Conducted in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, this study investigated whether low income Negro homemakers would be more receptive to an information bulletin that reflects their way of life than to a bulletin that did not. Subjects (16 in the first phase and 29 in the second phase of the bulletin pretest) marked the booklet ("Moving to the…
Descriptors: Attitudes, Bibliographies, Blacks, Bulletins
Dickinson, Gary – 1971
Educational variables and participation in adult education were examined in terms of the following hypotheses: (1) a higher level of achievement in the sequential-unit system will be associated with greater participation in the complementary-functional system; (2) a higher level of achievement within the family-educational system will be…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Adult Education, Educational Status Comparison, Family Role
Knapp, Stanley C. – 1970
The real mission of a flight surgeon is often misunderstood by military aviation students and their families. Because of his prominent position in student aviator selection and retention, a flight surgeon may represent a threat to an aviator's career. While the Army aviation training program is rapidly expanding, formal contacts between students…
Descriptors: Aircraft Pilots, Bibliographies, Family Life Education, Flight Training
Jackson, Sheryl R.; Kuvlesky, William P. – 1973
The research explored whether or not the occurrence and degree of family disability introduced a distinguishable patterned set of social life views among homemakers and, if so, to what extent the patterns are general to different populations. Disability was defined as the inability to assume expected roles. Seven Mexican American migrant workers…
Descriptors: Anglo Americans, Blacks, Disabilities, Expectation
Turner, Barbara F. – 1972
The relationship of race to career orientation among college women as measured on an eight-point scale of expectations ranging from "housewife only" through part-time work to "not married; career only" is examined. Demographic, developmental, and attitudinal antecedents of career orientation among 28 black and 45 white SES-stratified university…
Descriptors: Black Students, Career Choice, Career Planning, College Students
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Giele, Janet Zollinger – Social Policy, 1979
In the last decade, a number of variant family forms have arisen. One contention is that these experiments are a sign of strain in the traditional nuclear family and an indication of changes it must undergo in order to adapt to contemporary society. (Author/WI)
Descriptors: Employed Women, Family (Sociological Unit), Family Structure, Homemakers
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Myricks, Noel – Family Coordinator, 1977
The potential impact of the proposed Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) can be measured in areas such as alimony, child support, child custody, property ownership, divorce and rights of consortium. Statutes which use sex as the sole criterion would be unconstitutional. (Author)
Descriptors: Civil Rights, Divorce, Equal Opportunities (Jobs), Equal Protection
Groves, Marjorie P. – Extension Service Review, 1972
A food fest held at a local community settlement house and sponsored by the county Extended Food and Nutrition Education Program, showed that community cooperation in nutrition education improves communication and helps reach a wider audience. (JB)
Descriptors: Community Cooperation, Community Organizations, Foods Instruction, Home Economics
Steinmann, Anne – Journal of the National Association of Women Deans and Counselors, 1970
Use of the Inventory of Feminine Values" with a group of college women indicated that they were prepared to sacrifice a career for a family. Apparently, attitudes held by fathers of young women influence their attitudes toward working wives. Counselors must help young women plan early for problems to be faced working and raising a family. (CJ)
Descriptors: Career Opportunities, College Students, Counselor Role, Females
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Roberts, Robert E.; Roberts, Catherine Ramsay – Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences, 1982
Mexican American women reported more depressive symptoms than men (after controlling for effects of age, education, income) in two surveys conducted in Alameda County, California (1975, 1978). Among the married, the employed reported fewer symptoms than the nonemployed; there was no difference in depression scores of employed men and women.…
Descriptors: Analysis of Variance, Depression (Psychology), Employment, Females
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Kessler, Ronald C. – American Sociological Review, 1982
Analyzes data from eight epidemiological surveys to estimate the relative importance of income, education, and occupational status in predicting the distress of people in the normal population. Finds that the most important predictors of distress are different for men, women in the labor force, and homemakers. (Author/GC)
Descriptors: Educational Attainment, Employed Women, Employment Level, Homemakers
Pages: 1  |  ...  |  13  |  14  |  15  |  16  |  17  |  18  |  19  |  20  |  21  |  ...  |  31