Descriptor
Blue Collar Occupations | 5 |
Employed Women | 5 |
Employee Attitudes | 5 |
Nontraditional Occupations | 5 |
Work Attitudes | 5 |
Values | 4 |
Case Studies | 3 |
Service Occupations | 3 |
Urban Areas | 3 |
Adult Education | 2 |
Adults | 2 |
More ▼ |
Source
Author
Walshok, Mary Lindenstein | 5 |
Walshok, Marco Gary | 1 |
Publication Type
Reports - Research | 3 |
Reports - Descriptive | 2 |
Speeches/Meeting Papers | 2 |
Information Analyses | 1 |
Education Level
Audience
Location
California | 3 |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Walshok, Mary Lindenstein; Walshok, Marco Gary – 1978
Data from in-depth interviews with more than one hundred women over a three-year period suggest that the experience of women in skilled and semiskilled jobs contradicts the conventional wisdom about the values and motives of these women and challenge many sociological findings regarding the alienating character of much blue collar work. The women…
Descriptors: Adults, Blue Collar Occupations, Employed Women, Employee Attitudes
Walshok, Mary Lindenstein – 1979
Women's success in nontraditional blue collar jobs in the skilled trades or crafts appears to be tied to three separate but interrelated issues which are a function of differences in social background and shift in the structure of employment and economic opportunities for women, according to qualitative data gathered in in-depth interviews of more…
Descriptors: Adults, Blue Collar Occupations, Competence, Employed Women
Walshok, Mary Lindenstein – 1976
A two-year longitudinal study of 200 working women in California urban areas represents an effort to understand the processes by which specific interests and commitments to paid employment develop. Data from intensive personal interviews with women in traditional and nontraditional occupations should indicate factors which facilitate the entry of…
Descriptors: Blue Collar Occupations, Case Studies, Employed Parents, Employed Women
Walshok, Mary Lindenstein – 1978
Not only has the overall participation of women in the labor force increased dramatically since World War II, but the internal character of the female labor force is changing. The greatest increases have been among married women and young mothers, groups which thirty-five years ago represented the lowest participation groups. Women workers have a…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Blue Collar Occupations, Case Studies, Employed Parents
Walshok, Mary Lindenstein – 1976
A three-year study focused on 120 women in working class jobs (approximately 75% of which were nontraditional) in three major California cities. Emphasis was on searching out factors and processes facilitating greater participation of women in nontraditional blue collar and working class occupations. Attention was given to their personal and work…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Blue Collar Occupations, Career Choice, Case Studies