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Lisa Levinson

Gender Roles in Media | Allison Lantagne - 0 views

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    Huffington post from 5/15/14 about the role media plays in perpetuating gender roles and stereotypes. Several good examples
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

How stereotypes impair women's careers in science - 1 views

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    scientific study in 2013/published in March 2014 on how gender bias leads to discrimination of women in science. Cited in Inc.
Lisa Levinson

Here Are The Gender Stereotype-Busting Ads That Won The Sheryl Sandberg-Backed Glass Li... - 0 views

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    Sheryl Sandberg backs the Glass Lion Awards celebrating the work that addresses issues of gender inequality or prejudice. 2015 was the inaugural year, with 8 top ads getting the award. BuzzFeedNews gives a summary of each one, many from other countries.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Reinventing Yourself After 60: Where Do Baby Boomers Go from Here? (Video) - 0 views

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    Margaret Manning interviews John Tarnoff, reinvention guy who writes for Huffington Post Reinvention each week. Our initial challenge is our mindset and finding out who we are now after 55 or 50 years of living. Then reframing who we are to avoid or discard stereotypes of old-aging ideas.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Glass ceiling study: Women and people of color are penalized for valuing diversity. - 0 views

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    article by Amanda Hess, XXfactor, July 23, 2014 ""Minority and women leaders' engagement in diversity-valuing behavior may be viewed as selfishly advancing the social standing of their own low-status demographic groups."" So the trade-off is to get promoted yourself, but not help other women or people of color get promoted. In order to enter the executive suite, women have to backseat their desire to bring in more women or other diversity, and the stereotype of women not helping others advance is reinforced.
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.
anonymous

Lady logos: why are they all alike? - 0 views

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    Even if you've never purchased Mifeprex, the abortion pill that turns 10 years old this week, you've seen the logo. At a yoga studio, in the supermarket's natural foods aisle, or even at a charity event, the silhouette of a dancing woman has become the marker of a product designed for women.
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

What your phone calls might say about your health | The Advisory Board Daily Briefing - 0 views

  • Government surveillance programs point up new data-mining concerns. But the NSA monitoring programs focus on collecting "meta" data—not the actual procedures you've undergone, but merely the records of things you searched for online, or people you telephoned. What can this metadata reveal? Plenty about your health, experts argue; simply knowing who you're calling can be just as revealing as what you say. If you can track a series of calls, one privacy expert tells tells the New Yorker's Jane Mayer, "you know exactly what is happening—you don’t need the content.”
  • David Vladeck began an inquiry into data brokers' practices, concerned that algorithms that mined for data patterns could create unfair stereotypes. (Vladeck recently stepped down.) For example, "whether someone would be classified as a health risk just because they bought products linked to an increased chance of heart attack," the Associated Press reports.
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    blog by Dan Diamond, Managing Editor, Daily Briefing, June 9, 2013, on data mining using meta data.
Doris Reeves-Lipscomb

Introverts: There's Nothing Wrong With You - Forbes - 0 views

  • Introverts often wish they could change themselves. But there is tremendous power in self-acceptance. Once introverts stop struggling against their essential nature, they often report feeling liberated and more aware of how to maximize their natural gifts.
  • 1. Introverts don’t fit their negative stereotype.
  • 2. Introverts are not anomalies.
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • But studies show that 1/3 to 1/2 of the American population are introverts.
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    article by Christina Park on Forbes, 10/15/2014 on introverts
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