Examining the Intersection of Gender and Work

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Examining the Intersection of Gender and Work Powell ix-xx

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Examining the Intersection of Gender and Work. Powell ix-xx. In-class activity #3. Blue Collar vs. Pink Collar Jobs Three tasks: Identify each occupation as a blue collar job (male job) or pink collar job (female job) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Examining the Intersection of Gender and Work

Page 1: Examining the  Intersection of  Gender and Work

Examining the Intersection of

Gender and Work

Powell ix-xx

Page 2: Examining the  Intersection of  Gender and Work

In-class activity #3• Blue Collar vs. Pink Collar Jobs• Three tasks:

– Identify each occupation as a blue collar job (male job) or pink collar job (female job)

– Include one aspect of that job that brought your group to this conclusion

– Approximate the percentage of that occupation that is the majority gender

• Extra Credit Opportunity for Group– 1 point for identifying blue or pink collar correctly– 2 points for being within 4 percentage points of actual

composition

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Women may be in “male jobs” but their wages are less then a comparable male’s wage

WHY???

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Discrimination

• By employer

• By other employees

• By the customer

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Or….not discrimination

• Less investment in human capital– Women are more likely to finish high school;

men are more likely to get an advanced degree

• Enter lower paid occupations

• Hold lower level positions

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Sex vs. Gender

• Sex = Biological property of individuals– Sexual characteristics

• Gender = psychological and social ramifications of being male or female– Girly, macho, emotional, dominate…

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Sex and Gender is not the whole story• Also must include

– Race– Ethnicity– Culture

• Adds serious complications

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Gender typecasts occupations

• Influences wage

• Influences opinion about that job and the person within the job

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Quarter Overview on Gender• Gender’s impact on interviews• Gender’s impact on job evaluations and

promotions• Environmental changes due to changes in

gender composition• Sexuality in the workplace

– Welcome, i.e. relationships– Unwelcome, i.e. sexual harassment– Same sex relationships

• Affirmative Action

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Common Sense about the “Other” (Essed p. 6-13)

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Common Sense about the “Other” (Essed p. 6-13)

• Who is the “other”?• What is racism?

– Thoughts of racial superiority– Founded in belief that race defines a person– Assumption that group differences are BIOLOGICALLY

determined and unchangeable• People are very sensitive to being called a racist• Bugs Bunny examples…

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• What part did racism play in our society in the past?– Hierarchy– Appropriate

• What part does it play today?– No Hierarchy– Not appropriate

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Old vs. New Ideology

• Old: Not like because– Dirty– Ugly– Not intelligent

• New: Not like because– On welfare– Don’t speak proper English– Live on the east side

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How is racism transmitted?

• Politics• Media

• Education• Socialization

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Forms of Racism

• Overt Racism– Direct behavioral or verbal racially discriminatory acts

• Covert Racism– More subtle– Thoughts or indirect actions of racially discriminatory acts

• Three ways to look at– Individual– Institutional– Cultural

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Individual Racism

• Overt example:– An Arabic male student is brutally murdered

out of hate• Covert example:

– An employer decides not to hire an Asian American employee because she believes that the employee might drive away business, but tells the person that there are no more openings available

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Institutional Racism

• Overt Example:– A country club that has clearly written rules

which precludes any non-White members• Covert Example:

– An academic curriculum that only emphasizes European American History and does not address the history of other ethnic/cultural groups

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Cultural Racism

• Overt example:– The extermination of Jews in the Holocaust

• Covert example: – The unrealistic and stereotypical portrayal of

ethnic minorities in the media

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Consequences of Racism

• On the minority or target group– Low self-esteem, depression, anxiety– Limited access to necessary and desired

resources– Limited freedom and/or death

• On the majority or dominate group– Continued ignorance– Pressure to maintain the status quo– Impairment of moral development

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In-class exercise 4

COLOR BLIND In this provocative program, five students

from a variety of cultural and ethnic backgrounds speak with candor about racial harassment at their high school in an effort to encourage teenagers to examine their own

attitudes and behaviors.