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Rumrill, Phillip D.; Roessler, Richard T.; Cook, Bryan G. – Journal of Vocational Rehabilitation, 1998
Reentry workers with multiple sclerosis (n=23) participated with employers and rehabilitation counselors in training seminars; 14 received traditional job search intervention. After 16 weeks, 11 of the 37 had reentered the labor force. Most already had high self-efficacy and career maturity. (SK)
Descriptors: Career Development, Employment Potential, Employment Services, Job Placement
Iams, Howard M. – 1986
Many retired persons return to work, to some extent, following their retirement. Data from the 1982 New Beneficiary Survey (NBS) of 4,212 women and 5,307 men were examined to determine the employment of retired-worker beneficiaries who were working 18-30 months after first receiving retired-worker benefits. According to the NBS data, over…
Descriptors: Career Change, Employees, Older Adults, Part Time Employment
Lauer, Jim – Wisconsin Vocational Educator, 1984
Suggests ways that the Job Training Partnership Act can serve as a local labor force development tool. Besides assisting "hardcore unemployed," education can take a proactive role, keeping up with the technology and needs of business and industry. In return, business and industry must support education with state-of-the-art machinery and…
Descriptors: Adult Programs, Labor Force Development, Reentry Workers, Retraining
Goldstein, Ken – USA Today, 1983
The unemployed are a varied group; being unemployed may be related more to individual circumstances than the overall state of the economy. The unemployed are discussed in terms of job-losers, job-leavers, new entrants (job searching for the first time), reentrants, age groups, minority groups, and the discouraged worker. (SR)
Descriptors: Age, Apathy, Classification, Dismissal (Personnel)
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Sommerlad, Hilary; Sanderson, Peter – Journal of Vocational Education and Training: The Vocational Aspect of Education, 1997
Findings of a survey of British female solicitors (n=85), including those returning to the labor market, contradict economic rationality theory. The professional legal culture is conceptualized as male, and women who have taken career breaks encounter obstacles not overcome by training that prepares them for reentry. (SK)
Descriptors: Females, Foreign Countries, Labor Market, Labor Needs
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Baker, Joe G. – Monthly Labor Review, 2002
Data from the 1993 National Survey of College Graduates show that women are increasingly attracted to the field of law, possibly because of its favorable economic factors, such as relatively high earnings early in the career and ease of reentry after periods of nonparticipation in the labor force. (Contains 30 references.) (JOW)
Descriptors: Economic Factors, Employment Patterns, Females, Labor Force Nonparticipants
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Wolf, Gerrit; And Others – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 1995
Study of 72 displaced engineers in a retraining program showed that better training performance led to more successful employment outcomes; higher career motivation was related to lower training behavior and outcomes; and more experienced workers were less able to cope with change and had less positive outcomes. (SK)
Descriptors: Coping, Dislocated Workers, Engineers, Motivation
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Blau, David M. – Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 1992
Reduced form equations performed on data from the Employment Opportunities Pilot Projects found that many employed and unemployed job seekers reject at least one offer before accepting a job. Most accept an offer with a wage below the estimated reservation wage. (SK)
Descriptors: Employment Opportunities, Job Search Methods, Labor Economics, Personnel Selection
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Sterrett, Emily A. – Journal of Employment Counseling, 1998
Links self-efficacy theory with job club methodology by presenting a case study that measured changes in self-efficacy as a result of welfare recipients' participation in a job club. The job club enhanced each of four sources of job search expectations postulated by Bandura (1977, 1982) and resulted in return to work for all participants.…
Descriptors: Career Counseling, Case Studies, Job Search Methods, Reentry Workers
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Stein, David; Rocco, Tonette S.; Goldenetz, Kelly A. – Human Resource Development Quarterly, 2000
Structured interviews with 12 university employees 55 and older (faculty, administrators, civil service) indicated that some work past the age of retirement eligibility, some retire, and some reenter the work force after retirement. Aging was experienced differently depending on gender, position, and ethnicity. Policies rewarding those who stay or…
Descriptors: Age, Higher Education, Incentives, Older Workers
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Morgan, Barbara; Foster, Victoria – Journal of Career Development, 1999
Counseling reentry dual-career women using a cognitive development framework begins at the individual's level of cognitive functioning and assists in the creation of new cognitive frameworks within the context of sex-role socialization and gender bias. The goal is a new self-concept, awareness of multiple roles, and effective coping skills. (SK)
Descriptors: Career Counseling, Cognitive Development, Dual Career Family, Employed Women
Howell, Ruth S.; Schwartz, Helen – New Directions for Continuing Education, 1988
Community-based organizations provide special services and opportunities to women training for nontraditional occupations. (JOW)
Descriptors: Community Education, Economically Disadvantaged, Educationally Disadvantaged, Females
Lee, Chris; Zemke, Ron – Training, 1983
The real retraining of the American work force will not come about through massive, federally operated job training programs. It will come about only when employers are able to look forward to a promising economic future that requires highly trained and motivated employees and that offers real jobs. (Author/SSH)
Descriptors: Economic Development, Job Development, Labor Force Development, Reentry Workers
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Azrin, N. H.; And Others – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 1980
Welfare clients were selected and half were randomly assigned to Job Club program. Of continuing clients, 87 percent obtained jobs. Jobs obtained by Job Club clients were more likely to be enduring, nonsubsidized, and obtained by job-seeker's own efforts. Method appears to assure employment to all participating welfare clients. (Author/BEF)
Descriptors: Employment Opportunities, Employment Services, Job Placement, Program Evaluation
Fleming, Jacqueline I; Milone, Linda M. – Florida Vocational Journal, 1980
Describes programs responding to the challenge of the growing number of women returning to the work force. Discusses specific programs in several Florida counties. Vocational educators must be prepared to meet the needs of women who will spend an average of 34 years in the work force. (JOW)
Descriptors: Displaced Homemakers, Employed Women, Labor Force, Labor Market
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