[NIFL-WOMENLIT:3337] Re: gender equity

From: Danielle S Shareef (dshareef1@student.gsu.edu)
Date: Thu Oct 13 2005 - 17:52:53 EDT


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From: "Danielle S Shareef" <dshareef1@student.gsu.edu>
To: Multiple recipients of list <nifl-womenlit@literacy.nifl.gov>
Subject: [NIFL-WOMENLIT:3337] Re: gender equity
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Hi Daphne,

I just think it's sad because our country professes to be so advanced.  However, the archaic views about what a woman's place is in society and how much of the work that women do (inside and outside of the home) has no Dow Jones or NASDAQ value, contribute to the inadequate resources for child care and health care, as well as career advancement.  Gender equity may be an umbrella issue for all others in our society because if more women were included in the design and decision-making of power wielding  and policy-making institutions, many of the disadvantages would not exist. (Provided women aren't given access based on them emulating and perpetuating the standards and behaviors of the patriarchical establishment.

Danielle

-----Original Message-----
From: "Daphne Greenberg" <ALCDGG@langate.gsu.edu>
To: Multiple recipients of list <nifl-womenlit@literacy.nifl.gov>
Date: Wed, 12 Oct 2005 09:56:18 -0400 (EDT)
Subject: [NIFL-WOMENLIT:3327] gender equity

I have noticed that many adult learners (as well as adult literacy providers) assume that the US, as the number 1 world power must have the best gender equity in the world. I recently came across an article in Ms. magazine (Fall, 2005, p.61) which provides information that could be an impetus for all kinds of activities in the adult classroom: graph reading, understanding the concept of rank, geography lessons, and civics lessons.
Here are some of the facts listed in the article:
United States scored 17th of 58 countries surveyed in gender equity.
Sweden scored 1st of 58 countries surveyed in gender equity.
Egypt scored 58 out of 58.
The US ranked 8th in education for women, but for economic opportunity only 46th and in health only 42nd. 
The article includes the following quote:
"It seems that American women, while they are able to enter the workforce fairly easily, do not have opportunities to advance their careers once they are part of it, and remain concentrated in lower-paid professions."
Recommendations for the US include: maternity leave laws, affordable child care, and better reproductive health care.
The entire report can be found at:
www.weforum.org/gendergap 

Any thoughts about this and our learners?
Daphne



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