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Ramos, Jorje; Rodin, Jason; Preuss, Michael; Sosa, Eric; Doresett, Christine; Burleson, Chenoa – International Journal on Social and Education Sciences, 2021
College students at 14 Hispanic-Serving Institutions (HSIs) in New Mexico and Texas were surveyed about their experiences in and perceptions of higher education. Three primary foci were students' employment status, work commitments, and means of financing college. Most of the informants reported working while in college and, similar to previously…
Descriptors: Paying for College, Hispanic American Students, College Students, Nontraditional Students
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Mills, Melinda; Taht, Kadri – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2010
This article questions existing findings and provides new evidence about the consequences of nonstandard work schedules on partnership quality. Using quantitative couple data from The Netherlands Kinship Panel Study (NKPS) (N = 3,016) and semistructured qualitative interviews (N = 34), we found that, for women, schedules with varying hours…
Descriptors: Working Hours, Part Time Employment, Foreign Countries, Males
Polidano, Cain; Zakirova, Rezida – National Centre for Vocational Education Research (NCVER), 2011
Working in some capacity is almost considered de rigueur for tertiary students. The reasons for working and the impact this has on both an individual's ability to complete their studies and on their post-study labour market outcomes are only recently receiving attention. Using the 1995 and 1998 cohorts of the Longitudinal Surveys of Australian…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Working Hours, Higher Education, Income
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McLaughlin, Diane K.; Coleman-Jensen, Alisha J. – Rural Sociology, 2008
We examine the prevalence of nonstandard employment in the nonmetropolitan United States using the Current Population Survey Supplement on Contingent Work (1999 and 2001). We find that nonstandard work is more prevalent in nonmetropolitan than in central city or suburban areas. Logistic regression models controlling for sociodemographic and work…
Descriptors: Occupations, Employment Patterns, Metropolitan Areas, Incidence
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Wallace, Joan – Canadian Home Economics Journal, 1986
Part-time employment is becoming increasingly commonplace, necessitating new attitudes and better treatment from employers, unions, and in legislation. Three new types of part-time work are emerging: job sharing, phased retirement (gradual reduction of working hours), and paid leave. (SK)
Descriptors: Employment Patterns, Job Sharing, Part Time Employment, Sabbatical Leaves
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Stier, Haya – Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 1998
Jewish Israeli women (n=6,018) were more likely to leave reduced-hour or part-time jobs than full-time jobs. New mothers were more likely to move to reduced-hour or part-time work. Women in female-dominated or peripheral occupations were more likely to reduce hours or quit. In the long term, part-time work was disadvantageous to women. (SK)
Descriptors: Employed Women, Employment Patterns, Foreign Countries, Mothers
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Bednarzik, Robert W. – Monthly Labor Review, 1983
The most common economic reasons for part-time employment during recessions are cutbacks in weekly hours due to slack work and failure to find full-time positions. Each is characteristically distinct and illustrates different underlying labor market problems. (JOW)
Descriptors: Business Cycles, Economic Factors, Employment Patterns, Employment Problems
Stockard, Jean; Kalvelage, Joan – 1977
Twenty-nine entries including research reports, bibliographies, and a congressional hearing concern working patterns of less than full-time employment. (MLF)
Descriptors: Annotated Bibliographies, Career Exploration, Employed Women, Employment Patterns
Hamermesh, Daniel S. – 1996
This book studies work in the United States and Germany from two new viewpoints: (1) the division of work time into hours per day and days per week (as opposed to the standard analysis of weekly hours of work); and (2) the patterns of the particular times of the day and week when people are working, a focus on instantaneous time use. Information…
Descriptors: Adults, Developed Nations, Employed Parents, Employment
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Bengtsson, Jarl – Change, 1979
If education is considered a nonwork activity, any change in the individual's work time will pose new challenges for educational policy. Trends in the relationship between work and nonwork time are presented. Topics include: work weeks, women workers, demographic changes, part-time work, shiftwork, technological changes and family living.
Descriptors: Demography, Education Work Relationship, Educational Opportunities, Employed Women
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Owen, John D. – Monthly Labor Review, 1978
Part-time workers are usually relegated to low-paying jobs, which accounts for their lower earning rates. The article gives reasons for this situation, and analyzes the gain in workers' hourly earnings from additional education and experience. (MF)
Descriptors: Educational Background, Employment Experience, Employment Patterns, Labor Market
Employment Policies Inst., Washington, DC. – 1998
Part-time workers are those working fewer than 35 hours per week. Of the 113 million wage and salary workers in the labor force, only 17 percent are classified as part time. Four of five part-time workers choose to work part-time rather than full-time. The 3.8 million involuntary part-time workers constitute only 3.4 percent of the work force.…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Adult Education, Career Choice, Employment Patterns
Holden, Karen C.; And Others – 1981
Pre-Retirement Work Options is a demonstration project designed to develop and test alternative employment patterns for older workers in the Wisconsin Civil Service System. The program ws evaluated to determine the interest of older state workers in reducing their work hours prior to retirement as well as the impact of that reduction for those who…
Descriptors: Attitude Measures, Employee Attitudes, Employment Patterns, Gerontology
Schroeder, Karsten – 1983
In the Federal Republic of Germany, as elsewhere, the recent unemployment crisis has forced politicians, economists, trade unionists, and experts to consider a number of courses of action designed to reduce working time. Included among these alternatives are the following: adopting the 35-hour work week, shortening working life through early…
Descriptors: Change Strategies, Employment Opportunities, Employment Patterns, Employment Practices
Prywes, Ruth W. – 1974
This survey report contains findings on part-time work arrangements currently being offered by Greater Philadelphia Standard Metropolitan Statistical Area (SMSA) employers to minimally-skilled women workers. Employer willingness to extend nonstandard work arrangements and to establish the norm of steady employment in their establishments is…
Descriptors: Economic Research, Employed Women, Employer Attitudes, Employment Patterns
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