SlideShare a Scribd company logo
Performing in a Gendered Work ForceBy Lacey RossGender Roles in SocietyProfessor Dixon
BackgroundHuman beings “perform” their gender that we learn through socialization. (Kimmel)Our plight in the world is to become a credible version of the gender in which we believe we are or, that we relate with. (Jeanes)Women are still being treated unfairly in the working environment; lower wages, the “glass ceiling” concept, sexual harassment, and tokenism. (Kimmel)Transgendered indivduals experience an increasing difficult task when changing their sex and retaining the same job. (Schilt & Connell)
Background (cont.)Research shows that individuals who make the change from a women to a man have more opened opportunities; while, a man making the change to be a woman have substantially smaller opportunities and run the risk of, “losing high powered positions.” (Schilt & Connell)This study also illustrated that how people “perform” in the work force determine their level of treatment. (Schilt & Connell)Men who demonstrated more feminine qualities were more likely to be segregated like women are in the work force. (Schilt & Connell)
HypothesisIn the beginning of this project I identified that, in regards to the work force, I wanted to research if individuals in the working environment believe they must “perform” to the stereotypical assumptions made about their gender. Also I wanted to correlate “doing” gender with the inequalities found between men and women in job market. Before conducting my research, I hypothesized that men and women, more specifically women, experience some level of inequality in with their occupation. I also hypothesized that because women experience a higher level of inequality in the job market, they also would have higher expectations to “perform” to the stereotypical assumptions and expectations made by society.
MethodFor this project I used two types of research methods:             Survey and one personal interviewThe survey was given to 49 individuals with a variety of different work histories including; corporateand self-employment.The survey participants were asked a series of questions that related to unequal treatment and gender performanceI divided the data based on age of the participant
Method (cont.)The interview was conducted with a 65 year-old female who had many years of experience working in a Cannery where, gender inequality was prevalent.She was asked the same questions on the survey sheet along with the narratives she provided from her work history.I removed her name from any written data to be morally and ethically sound.
Results (Survey)This section reflects the combined data of all age groupsOut of the 49 individuals surveyed, over 57 percent reported that they have not witnessed and/or experienced any unfair treatment based on gender. However, 22 percent of individuals surveyed admitted that at some point in their careers they had and/or witnessed unfair gendered treatment.Of that same group of 49 individuals, around 49 percent were aware that women are continually bringing less money home than men are.
Results (cont.)When asked if both men and women were capable of being successful in managerial positions 71 percent surveyed agree that men and women equally could be successful.Of the 49 participants surveyed 60 percent believe that companies are becoming less gendered than they were twenty to thirty years ago; however, the majority that agreed the work force appears less gendered, they also pointed out the stereotypes and gender expectations still exist in one form or another.
Results (cont.)53 percent surveyed said that at one point in time they did feel like they had to “perform” their gender, while a close 47 percent never felt like they had to in their working environment.Finally, the data reflects that 63 percent of the 49 individuals studied thought that currently men and women are offered the same opportunities, for the most part, in their working environment.
Results (cont.)Group 1: ages 16-25, Group 2: 26-35, Group 3: ages 36-45, and Group 4: 46-55More individuals from Group 4, about 4 out of six, agreed that opportunities for women have drastically increased since they joined the work force. This same group of individuals was more split in regards to women bringing in less money.Group 1 stated that they feel it somewhat necessary to “perform” their gender, while Group 2 (77 percent) stated that gender performance at work was much higher.
Results (cont.)Within Group 3 almost all participants agreed that men and women could equally be successful in a managerial position and, that women and men have the same opportunities at work (60 percent).Finally within Group 1, 70 percent surprisingly were aware that women are bringing home less money than men.
Results (interview)Woman A illustrated in her interview that:Unequal pay was drastically worse then (She was paid $8.75 while men doing the same job as her were being paid between $10-$15)Womanly characteristics such as compassion and emotion were looked down upon in the cannery so she adopted more masculine tendencies.She also stated this, “Women really couldn’t win in my generation. You were either an unhappy housewife, because your husband paycheck couldn’t pay the bills or unhappily employed. Neither allowed women to step outside the preconceived ideas about them. In each setting, women, were suppose to be submissive and supportive. We were expected to be constant performers in a sense.”
ConclusionThere appears to be some correlation between gender performance and unequal treatment in the work force.Although from the small sample of date it is important to note that the correlation between gender performance and unequal treatment is not strong enough to make an adequate conclusion.A bigger sample and a more in depth experiment would be sufficient in this scenario.
Conclusion (cont.)There also appears to be a relationship between generations in regards to gender performance in the work force.I believe that this research project is just the beginning of my work with occupation inequality and gender performance.
ReferencesJeanes, E. (2007). The Doing and Undoing of Gender: The Importance of Being a Credible Female Victim. Gender, Work, and Organization. Retrieved July 17, 2009, Academic Search Premier Database.Kimmel, M. (2008). The Gendered Society. (3rd Ed.).New York: Oxford.Schilt, K., & Connell, C. (2007). Do Workplace Gender Transitions Make Gender Trouble?. Gender, Work & Organization. Retrieved July 27th, 2009, Academic Search Premier Database.

More Related Content

PPTX
Poster for Spring Research Fair 2014
PPTX
Kate dodge gender roles powerpoint
PPTX
Questionnaires
PPT
Is the Criminal Justice System biased towards or against women?
PPS
Egalitarian relationships
DOCX
WritingSample1-499
PPTX
Kate dodge gender roles powerpoint
DOCX
Sex of an Act of Power and Effects of Gender Roles
Poster for Spring Research Fair 2014
Kate dodge gender roles powerpoint
Questionnaires
Is the Criminal Justice System biased towards or against women?
Egalitarian relationships
WritingSample1-499
Kate dodge gender roles powerpoint
Sex of an Act of Power and Effects of Gender Roles

What's hot (19)

DOCX
THREE KEY EXPLANATIONS FOR GENDER PATTERNS IN CRIME
DOCX
Explaining female crime sociologically
PPTX
Gender based social reactions powerpoint
PPTX
DOCX
2013 why is most crime male crime?
PPTX
Gender (Crime & Deviance)
PDF
bufferingeffectshonorsthesis
DOC
Gender & Crime Booklet
PPTX
Gender differences in crime
PPT
Module 3 Part 1 Review
PPT
Women, Crime and Criminal Justice
DOCX
MarriageandtheFamResearchPaper
PPT
Gender and crime draft
PPTX
Gender and crime revision crime and deviance A2- Lay out for an essay
PPTX
Relationships AQA Paper 3 PSYCHOLOGY A2
PDF
Desejo sexual com mais de 45 anos
DOCX
Kuhtreiber Final Draft
PPTX
Sociology crime and gender
PPTX
Binary Thoughts on the "Third Gender"
THREE KEY EXPLANATIONS FOR GENDER PATTERNS IN CRIME
Explaining female crime sociologically
Gender based social reactions powerpoint
2013 why is most crime male crime?
Gender (Crime & Deviance)
bufferingeffectshonorsthesis
Gender & Crime Booklet
Gender differences in crime
Module 3 Part 1 Review
Women, Crime and Criminal Justice
MarriageandtheFamResearchPaper
Gender and crime draft
Gender and crime revision crime and deviance A2- Lay out for an essay
Relationships AQA Paper 3 PSYCHOLOGY A2
Desejo sexual com mais de 45 anos
Kuhtreiber Final Draft
Sociology crime and gender
Binary Thoughts on the "Third Gender"
Ad

Similar to Lacey (20)

DOCX
Gender Inequality paper
DOCX
Newman Research proposal Final Draft (1)
PDF
Gender Stratification Essay
DOCX
Gender inequality in workplace
PPT
Sc2220 Lecture 11 2009
PPT
BA 15 Chapter 16
 
KEY
Cms498.chap9 presentation
PDF
Essay About Gender Equality
PPTX
IGP PPT Rishabh Rawat.pptx
PDF
CIS 110- Gender Discrimination
PPT
Day 10 Plenary 1 - Catharina Alpkvist
DOCX
To Laura Graves for her love and suppo.docx
PPTX
Women & The Glass Ceiling
PDF
Cms498.chapter9
DOCX
submit a ten page research paper related to data analytics in you.docx
PPT
Gender Still Affects Wages
PDF
Women in transition and today: what do they want, realize, and experience in ...
PPTX
Sc2220 lecture 9 2012
PDF
Gender Inequality
PPT
Gender Perspective in the Workplace
Gender Inequality paper
Newman Research proposal Final Draft (1)
Gender Stratification Essay
Gender inequality in workplace
Sc2220 Lecture 11 2009
BA 15 Chapter 16
 
Cms498.chap9 presentation
Essay About Gender Equality
IGP PPT Rishabh Rawat.pptx
CIS 110- Gender Discrimination
Day 10 Plenary 1 - Catharina Alpkvist
To Laura Graves for her love and suppo.docx
Women & The Glass Ceiling
Cms498.chapter9
submit a ten page research paper related to data analytics in you.docx
Gender Still Affects Wages
Women in transition and today: what do they want, realize, and experience in ...
Sc2220 lecture 9 2012
Gender Inequality
Gender Perspective in the Workplace
Ad

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
Peak of Data & AI Encore- AI for Metadata and Smarter Workflows
PPTX
VMware vSphere Foundation How to Sell Presentation-Ver1.4-2-14-2024.pptx
PDF
Bridging biosciences and deep learning for revolutionary discoveries: a compr...
PDF
Blue Purple Modern Animated Computer Science Presentation.pdf.pdf
PPTX
PA Analog/Digital System: The Backbone of Modern Surveillance and Communication
PDF
Reach Out and Touch Someone: Haptics and Empathic Computing
PDF
Electronic commerce courselecture one. Pdf
PDF
TokAI - TikTok AI Agent : The First AI Application That Analyzes 10,000+ Vira...
PDF
Encapsulation theory and applications.pdf
PDF
KodekX | Application Modernization Development
PDF
How UI/UX Design Impacts User Retention in Mobile Apps.pdf
PPTX
Detection-First SIEM: Rule Types, Dashboards, and Threat-Informed Strategy
PPT
Teaching material agriculture food technology
PDF
Building Integrated photovoltaic BIPV_UPV.pdf
PDF
The Rise and Fall of 3GPP – Time for a Sabbatical?
DOCX
The AUB Centre for AI in Media Proposal.docx
PDF
Empathic Computing: Creating Shared Understanding
PDF
Encapsulation_ Review paper, used for researhc scholars
PDF
Advanced methodologies resolving dimensionality complications for autism neur...
PDF
Architecting across the Boundaries of two Complex Domains - Healthcare & Tech...
Peak of Data & AI Encore- AI for Metadata and Smarter Workflows
VMware vSphere Foundation How to Sell Presentation-Ver1.4-2-14-2024.pptx
Bridging biosciences and deep learning for revolutionary discoveries: a compr...
Blue Purple Modern Animated Computer Science Presentation.pdf.pdf
PA Analog/Digital System: The Backbone of Modern Surveillance and Communication
Reach Out and Touch Someone: Haptics and Empathic Computing
Electronic commerce courselecture one. Pdf
TokAI - TikTok AI Agent : The First AI Application That Analyzes 10,000+ Vira...
Encapsulation theory and applications.pdf
KodekX | Application Modernization Development
How UI/UX Design Impacts User Retention in Mobile Apps.pdf
Detection-First SIEM: Rule Types, Dashboards, and Threat-Informed Strategy
Teaching material agriculture food technology
Building Integrated photovoltaic BIPV_UPV.pdf
The Rise and Fall of 3GPP – Time for a Sabbatical?
The AUB Centre for AI in Media Proposal.docx
Empathic Computing: Creating Shared Understanding
Encapsulation_ Review paper, used for researhc scholars
Advanced methodologies resolving dimensionality complications for autism neur...
Architecting across the Boundaries of two Complex Domains - Healthcare & Tech...

Lacey

  • 1. Performing in a Gendered Work ForceBy Lacey RossGender Roles in SocietyProfessor Dixon
  • 2. BackgroundHuman beings “perform” their gender that we learn through socialization. (Kimmel)Our plight in the world is to become a credible version of the gender in which we believe we are or, that we relate with. (Jeanes)Women are still being treated unfairly in the working environment; lower wages, the “glass ceiling” concept, sexual harassment, and tokenism. (Kimmel)Transgendered indivduals experience an increasing difficult task when changing their sex and retaining the same job. (Schilt & Connell)
  • 3. Background (cont.)Research shows that individuals who make the change from a women to a man have more opened opportunities; while, a man making the change to be a woman have substantially smaller opportunities and run the risk of, “losing high powered positions.” (Schilt & Connell)This study also illustrated that how people “perform” in the work force determine their level of treatment. (Schilt & Connell)Men who demonstrated more feminine qualities were more likely to be segregated like women are in the work force. (Schilt & Connell)
  • 4. HypothesisIn the beginning of this project I identified that, in regards to the work force, I wanted to research if individuals in the working environment believe they must “perform” to the stereotypical assumptions made about their gender. Also I wanted to correlate “doing” gender with the inequalities found between men and women in job market. Before conducting my research, I hypothesized that men and women, more specifically women, experience some level of inequality in with their occupation. I also hypothesized that because women experience a higher level of inequality in the job market, they also would have higher expectations to “perform” to the stereotypical assumptions and expectations made by society.
  • 5. MethodFor this project I used two types of research methods: Survey and one personal interviewThe survey was given to 49 individuals with a variety of different work histories including; corporateand self-employment.The survey participants were asked a series of questions that related to unequal treatment and gender performanceI divided the data based on age of the participant
  • 6. Method (cont.)The interview was conducted with a 65 year-old female who had many years of experience working in a Cannery where, gender inequality was prevalent.She was asked the same questions on the survey sheet along with the narratives she provided from her work history.I removed her name from any written data to be morally and ethically sound.
  • 7. Results (Survey)This section reflects the combined data of all age groupsOut of the 49 individuals surveyed, over 57 percent reported that they have not witnessed and/or experienced any unfair treatment based on gender. However, 22 percent of individuals surveyed admitted that at some point in their careers they had and/or witnessed unfair gendered treatment.Of that same group of 49 individuals, around 49 percent were aware that women are continually bringing less money home than men are.
  • 8. Results (cont.)When asked if both men and women were capable of being successful in managerial positions 71 percent surveyed agree that men and women equally could be successful.Of the 49 participants surveyed 60 percent believe that companies are becoming less gendered than they were twenty to thirty years ago; however, the majority that agreed the work force appears less gendered, they also pointed out the stereotypes and gender expectations still exist in one form or another.
  • 9. Results (cont.)53 percent surveyed said that at one point in time they did feel like they had to “perform” their gender, while a close 47 percent never felt like they had to in their working environment.Finally, the data reflects that 63 percent of the 49 individuals studied thought that currently men and women are offered the same opportunities, for the most part, in their working environment.
  • 10. Results (cont.)Group 1: ages 16-25, Group 2: 26-35, Group 3: ages 36-45, and Group 4: 46-55More individuals from Group 4, about 4 out of six, agreed that opportunities for women have drastically increased since they joined the work force. This same group of individuals was more split in regards to women bringing in less money.Group 1 stated that they feel it somewhat necessary to “perform” their gender, while Group 2 (77 percent) stated that gender performance at work was much higher.
  • 11. Results (cont.)Within Group 3 almost all participants agreed that men and women could equally be successful in a managerial position and, that women and men have the same opportunities at work (60 percent).Finally within Group 1, 70 percent surprisingly were aware that women are bringing home less money than men.
  • 12. Results (interview)Woman A illustrated in her interview that:Unequal pay was drastically worse then (She was paid $8.75 while men doing the same job as her were being paid between $10-$15)Womanly characteristics such as compassion and emotion were looked down upon in the cannery so she adopted more masculine tendencies.She also stated this, “Women really couldn’t win in my generation. You were either an unhappy housewife, because your husband paycheck couldn’t pay the bills or unhappily employed. Neither allowed women to step outside the preconceived ideas about them. In each setting, women, were suppose to be submissive and supportive. We were expected to be constant performers in a sense.”
  • 13. ConclusionThere appears to be some correlation between gender performance and unequal treatment in the work force.Although from the small sample of date it is important to note that the correlation between gender performance and unequal treatment is not strong enough to make an adequate conclusion.A bigger sample and a more in depth experiment would be sufficient in this scenario.
  • 14. Conclusion (cont.)There also appears to be a relationship between generations in regards to gender performance in the work force.I believe that this research project is just the beginning of my work with occupation inequality and gender performance.
  • 15. ReferencesJeanes, E. (2007). The Doing and Undoing of Gender: The Importance of Being a Credible Female Victim. Gender, Work, and Organization. Retrieved July 17, 2009, Academic Search Premier Database.Kimmel, M. (2008). The Gendered Society. (3rd Ed.).New York: Oxford.Schilt, K., & Connell, C. (2007). Do Workplace Gender Transitions Make Gender Trouble?. Gender, Work & Organization. Retrieved July 27th, 2009, Academic Search Premier Database.