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Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Tesla's Sexism Case Exposes a Major Reason for the Gender Gap | Fortune.com - 0 views

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    Heidi Hartmann writes about pay gap that is compounded when a woman is hired at a lower salary based on her previous salary that was most certainly lower than her male counterpart.
anonymous

Gendergap Info Page - 1 views

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    Gendergap -- Details about the gender gap.
Lisa Levinson

Summer camps try to solve Silicon Valley's gender gap - Aug. 17, 2012 - 0 views

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    Attempt to interest girls in tech careers by Silicon Valley. Interesting in that this is a business decision, not just an altruistic one. Women are not a big factor in the app design field, and it is felt they would design different apps than are currently being produced.
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    Good career choice for the future
Lisa Levinson

Women In Learning and Leadership (WILL) - 1 views

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    Interesting org that strives to foster a deeper understanding of gender and its intersections with race, culture, class, sexuality and other aspects of social identity. This program provides opportunities for women to explore career and life choices in multiple disciplines that enable them to excel and realize their full potential. Connects students with each other and to a strong supportive network of critical thinking, intellectual curiosity, problem-solving and leadership skills.
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    Although mostly for high school and college students, WILL has an international program and offers some wonderful learning opportunities.
anonymous

Some Facts About Women Entrepreneurs - 0 views

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    "Today, more women are breaking free from the traditional, gender-specific roles and venturing into the business world. Not only are they holding high corporate positions but they are also successful women entrepreneurs who own almost half of all businesses in the United States. The steady rise in female entrepreneurs can be due to many different reasons, most of which share the same rational as their male counterparts-passion for their ideas, the desire to become their own boss, and the need to address philanthropic causes. A recent study indicated that 1 out of every 11 adult women is an entrepreneur in the United States. Women business owners contribute to the overall employment of 18 million workers and generate anywhere from $2 to $3 trillion in U.S. economy revenues. Many of the important facts that follow will support these findings."
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Shireen Mitchell - 0 views

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    A bio of Shireen Mitchell on the National Council of Women's Organizations website. She is "ED of Digital Sisters/Sistas, a nonprofit organization on using media and technology to access self-sufficiency tools for women and children who are traditionally underserved." Has written "Gaining Daily Access to Science and Technology" in the book 50 Ways to Improve Women's Lives and Access to Technology: Race, Gender, Class Bias.
Lisa Levinson

http://www.thebostonclub.com/index.php/download_file/view/338/99/ - 0 views

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    Boston Club report, 2013, of Boston area women and nonprofit organization representation "For over 20 years, The Boston Club has worked collaboratively with local and regional nonprofit organizations of all sizes to identify and recruit qualified women for positions as directors, trustees, and overseers. During that period, we have placed over 175 women on nonprofit boards. We also have conducted over 30 programs about nonprofit board service, with topics ranging from the basic questions a board candidate needs to ask, to the latest issues of governance affecting nonprofits. Through these initiatives, we have met hundreds of nonprofit executives, board and nominating chairs, and women who serve on their boards. We are continually amazed and energized by the missions and breadth of work conducted by nonprofits, their contributions to the economy of Massachusetts, the vital services and programs provided to our citizens, and the dedication their boards exhibit. But even we could not answer the question: how many women serve on nonprofit boards in Massachusetts? Until now. Why is this information important? Nonprofit organizations play a major role in the economies of many towns and cities in the state, generating $234 billion in revenues in 2010. In 2010, nonprofit jobs represented 16.7% of the total employment in Massachusetts 1 . We are known worldwide for our universities, hospitals, and cultural institutions, most of which are nonprofit organizations. Fifty-seven percent of women in Massachusetts are in the workforce. For The Boston Club, which has long tracked the number of women in leadership positions in publically owned companies, the question of gender diversity in the leadership of nonprofit organizations is part of our mission. We believe that the advancement of women to significant and visible leadership roles in all types of businesses will have lasting and meaningful impact on business performance and the economic health of our communities."
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

A Social Media Etiquette Guide You Might Find Useful : @ProBlogger - 0 views

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    interesting infographic on social media etiquette, numbers of participants, gender distribution, etc. for Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Google Plus, Instagram, Pinterest...
Lisa Levinson

No Ceilings: The Full Participation Project - 0 views

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    A Data-driven approach to gender equality shows that although some gains have been made, not enough have been. Since 1995, the baseline data year, shows mixed gains. For example, some women still don't have the right to vote, 1 in 4 girls was married before her 18th birthday, girls and boys test similarly in math and science yet women are still not entering those higher paying fields. On the plus side, more women are surviving childbirth and the general health of women has improved.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Accenture-IWD-2015-Research-Listen-Learn-Lead.pdf - 0 views

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    Survey in November 2014 by Accenture of 3,600 business professionals from entry level to management (600 from US) (respondents split evenly by gender, age, and level in their organizations) on listening, learning, and leading in the workplace, 2015. Finds that multi-tasking depresses good listening (which is valued as a work skill) and that while technology enables leaders to communicate quickly with workforce, it can also make them too accessible and subject to information overload.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Gender and Power in Online Communication:WP01-05 - 0 views

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    early look by Susan Herring, Indiana University, (2001) of how women fare online. one interesting paragraph on projected changes of world wide web and impact on women.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Gender Styles in Computer Meditated Communication - 0 views

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    interesting section on computer mediated communications that provides names of women researchers involved in this work, such as Susan Herring, Cheris Kramarae & Jeanie Taylor, Amy Bruckman, Kathleen Michel, and Gladys We. I will need to research more current work by these women since this article is probably from the early 2000s.
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    interesting section on computer mediated communications that provides names of women researchers involved in this work, such as Susan Herring, Cheris Kramarae & Jeanie Taylor, Amy Bruckman, Kathleen Michel, and Gladys We. I will need to research more current work by these women since this article is probably from the early 2000s.
Lisa Levinson

Sheryl Sandberg: When Women Get Stuck, Corporate America Gets Stuck - WSJ - 0 views

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    Part of the series the Wall Street Journal did on the Women and Work 2015 report by Lean In and McKinsey.
Lisa Levinson

What's Holding Women Back in the Workplace? - WSJ - 0 views

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    A good summary of the LeanIn McKinsey report with an interactive version of the report.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Strategies for Retaining Female Engineers - IEEE Spectrum - 0 views

  • “Creating workplaces that have a lot of flexibility, that allow for people to work in a way that fits best with them, boosts creativity and job satisfaction,” Metcalf says, and these are the settings where women stay and thrive.
  • No matter what type of organization women work for, large or small, public or private, their relationships with their immediate bosses are critical to whether they feel engaged and content. The ideal supervisor is committed to his or her subordinates’ advancement and development, assigns stretch projects, and provides necessary support and feedback to help them be successful, Bilimoria says. And workplaces that employ women in higher levels are more apt to retain women at the lower levels. “There need to be multilevel champions [of women] from the top as well as from the bottom and the middle, because women are more sensitive to dealing with gender bias,” she says. Workplace initiatives that offer leadership development, mentoring, and networking for women reap the benefits by retaining women, Bilimoria’s research shows.
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    good lock at women with sTEM credentials and why they haven't stayed in field
anonymous

Lady Logos Must Include Ribbons, Squiggles, And Dancing Bodies - 1 views

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    In an image-based essay, artist Shana Moulton collects logos from women's health, beauty, and support groups. Here finding: logos for lady groups feature mainly "Squiggles, Trees, Ribbons and Spirals" and other shapes that reinforce gender stereotypes.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Andrew Lih | USC professor and author of The Wikipedia Revolution - 0 views

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    great article on rise and decline of Wikipedia by Andrew Lih, June 21, 2015, NYT. Rise of smartphones is one challenge; fundraising continues apace creating new tensions around allocating/dividing proceeds; record participation in elections for new trustees is call for new governance?; too few women as editors or trustees; yet Wikipedia is most popular way into articles/resources in museums, etc.
Lisa Levinson

Modern Parenthood | Pew Research Center - 0 views

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    "The way mothers and fathers spend their time has changed dramatically in the past half century. Dads are doing more housework and child care; moms more paid work outside the home. Neither has overtaken the other in their "traditional" realms, but their roles are converging, according to a new Pew Research Center analysis of long-term data on time use. At the same time, roughly equal shares of working mothers and fathers report in a new Pew Research Center survey feeling stressed about juggling work and family life: 56% of working moms and 50% of working dads say they find it very or somewhat difficult to balance these responsibilities."
Lisa Levinson

Home Economics: The Link Between Work-Life Balance and Income Equality - The Atlantic - 0 views

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    From the Atlantic July/August 2013 edition by Stephen Marche "Men's absence from the conversation about work and life is strange, because decisions about who works and who takes care of the children, and who makes the money and how the money is spent, are not decided by women alone or by some vague and impersonal force called society. Decisions in heterosexual relationships are made by women and men together. When men aren't part of the discussion about balancing work and life, outdated assumptions about fatherhood are allowed to go unchallenged and, far more important, key realities about the relationship between work and family are elided. The central conflict of domestic life right now is not men versus women, mothers versus fathers. It is family versus money. Domestic life today is like one of those behind-the-scenes TV series about show business. The main narrative tension is: "How the hell are we going to make this happen?" There are tears and laughs and little intrigues, but in the end, it's just a miracle that the show goes on, that everyone is fed and clothed and out the door each day." He goes on to criticize Sheryl Sandberg for perpetuating an outdated model of women acting like men to get ahead. Marche advocates for a new paradigm of family friendly policies that reflect the reality of today - couples making decisions based on economic and social factors, not whether they will get to the C suite.
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