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Haddock, Shelley A.; Zimmerman, Toni Schindler; Ziemba, Scott J.; Current, Lisa R. – Journal of Marital and Family Therapy, 2001
Investigated adaptive strategies of middle class, dual earner couples (N=47) with children that are successfully managing family and work. Guided by grounded-theory methodology, analysis of interview data revealed these successful couples structured their lives around 10 major strategies. Each strategy is defined and illustrated through the…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Children, Dual Career Family, Employed Parents
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Perna, Laura W. – Journal of Higher Education, 2001
This study used data from the 1993 National Study of Postsecondary Faculty to examine the extent to which the concentration of women among part-time and nontenure-track faculty is related to family responsibilities. It found that in fact the effects of family responsibilities are less advantageous for women than for men. (EV)
Descriptors: Academic Rank (Professional), Adjunct Faculty, College Faculty, Family (Sociological Unit)
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Riquelme, Graciela C. – Convergence, 2004
In the midst of deep transformation in the world economy, women have new problems, and still face hurdles that prevent their full and equitable participation in the labour market. Unceasing economic globalisation and the boom in service industries have increased women's employment, despite the pressure to reduce public sector spending and the…
Descriptors: Females, Sex Fairness, Public Sector, Labor Market
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Vanderburg, David – Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2004
This article examines and analyzes Semco, a company that changed the way it viewed and treated its workers for the better. It is the contention of Semco's CEO, that at most large corporations "everyone is part of a gigantic, impersonal machine, and it is impossible to feel motivated when you feel you are just another cog. Human nature demands…
Descriptors: Rewards, Motivation, Employee Attitudes, Corporations
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Lobel, Sharon – Academe, 2004
Much of the dialogue about part-time faculty on the tenure track has focused on individuals who have not yet earned tenure and whose chances of obtaining it may be affected by the challenges of bearing or raising children. As a pretenure faculty member with young children, the author pursued the path of many colleagues in academia: she found…
Descriptors: Tenure, College Faculty, Personal Narratives, Part Time Faculty
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Zilber, Ettie – Journal of Research in International Education, 2005
What is the impact of the international school experience on the children of educators who live and study in close proximity with their parents and parents' colleagues? In this study, educators, who are teachers, counselors, specialists and administrators, describe their impressions of the benefits and challenges of this unique expatriate family…
Descriptors: International Schools, Family Work Relationship, Parents as Teachers, Children
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Connidis, Ingrid Arnet – Canadian Journal on Aging, 2003
High divorce rates over the past 40 years have affected multiple generations and have long-term consequences for family relationships. This article applies a life course perspective as it explores the reverberation of relationship dissolution beyond the nuclear family. Qualitative data from a study involving 86 adults from 10 three-generation…
Descriptors: Divorce, Family (Sociological Unit), Intimacy, Parent Child Relationship
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Metz, Isabel – Career Development International, 2005
Purpose: This study aims to assess whether differences exist in the barriers reported by, and in the person- and situation-centred factors related to the managerial advancement of, women with and without children. The study also seeks to examine whether having children influences womens advancement, by affecting person-situation factors such as…
Descriptors: Career Development, Promotion (Occupational), Occupational Aspiration, Family Work Relationship
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
Shore, Rima – 1998
Increasing numbers of employed parents of young children, increasing work-family conflict experienced by these parents, and the importance of early experience for children's brain development combine to suggest opportunities for business organizations to improve their competitiveness and compassion. This report draws upon data from the National…
Descriptors: Brain, Case Studies, Employed Parents, Employee Assistance Programs
Vanier Inst. of the Family, Ottawa (Ontario). – 1997
This report is intended to increase awareness of the connections between two central spheres of social activity--work and family. Complementing the conventional analyses of the labor force in terms of economic sectors, educational requisites, age and income distribution, the report also presents an analysis of the family circumstances of the…
Descriptors: Family Caregivers, Family Characteristics, Family Financial Resources, Family Income
Waterhouse, Peter; Wilson, Bruce; Ewer, Peter – 1999
An overview of recent literature on changes in the nature and patterns of work and their implications for vocational education and training (VET) is offered. Changes in the nature and patterns of work present significant challenges to the VET sector. More women have entered the work force; unemployment has reemerged as a significant factor;…
Descriptors: Change, Educational Policy, Employed Women, Employment Opportunities
New England Resource Center for Higher Education, 2003
The message of new faculty is not new, but their power may be. As the demand for new faculty increases due to retirements and increased enrollments in systems and institutions around the country, large cohorts of tenure-track faculty are being hired. Early-career faculty want what they've wanted for many years now: clarity surrounding the tenure…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Beginning Teachers, Tenure, Faculty Workload
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Goldberg, Wendy A.; And Others – Child Development, 1996
Examined mothers' total weekly work hours and psychological work involvement in relation to children's achievement behaviors and mothers' parenting. Subjects were 105 middle-class children and their mothers. Results indicated that high numbers of weekly work hours were associated with poorer teacher ratings of children's grades, school work…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Child Behavior, Classroom Environment, Employed Parents
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Zvonkovic, Anisa M.; And Others – Family and Consumer Sciences Research Journal, 1995
Includes "Introduction" (Zvonkovic); "Work-Family Conflict and the Quality of Family Life" (Weigel et al.); "Generational Differences in the Meaning of Retirement from Farming" (Marotz-Baden et al.); "Economic Resources, Influence and Stress among Married Couples" (Greaves et al.); "Needs and Priorities in Balancing Paid and Family Work" (Nichols…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Family Environment, Family Life, Family Work Relationship
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