Careers
Professionals and Employers
Anecdotal
evidence suggests that young women are put off
non-traditional work choices partly because
they lack any hands-on experience of what the
work involves. Exposure to different types of
skills and work is potentially a key component
of reducing job segregation.
The introduction of greater vocationalism into
the curriculum for 14-19 year olds raises some
new issues and challenges in reducing job segregation.
The
current school experience of young people is
already creating stereotyped choices and job
segregation; greater choice at 14 and entry
onto vocational routeways into work can compound
gender gaps unless additional targeted work
is done to improve the quality of advice and
guidance to young people.
Why has encouraging girls and
women to take up ‘non traditional’ careers become more than
an equal opportunities issue?
- Employers are experiencing severe skill
shortages in the engineering and are having
to recruit a more diverse workforce.
- It is also becoming more widely recognised
that occupations are segregated by gender
Almost 30 years after the Sex Discrimination
Act, occupational segregation continues to
be one of the main causes of the gender pay
gap and a major barrier to equality.
- Women are also forming an increasing proportion
of the total workforce. (‘Women will
contribute to 80% of the growth in the labour
force by the year 2006’ The Rising Tide,
1994)
- It makes business sense that employers
recruit from the whole of the labour force
not just 50% of it. By ignoring women, employers
are missing out on untapped potential.
- A more diverse workforce can contribute
to a healthy workplace culture. The skills
that women can often bring, such as communication
and negotiation skills, cooperation rather
than competition, are skills which the industries
are saying they need.
Please
refer to the UK
Resource Centre for Women in SET and the
JIVE
websites for further information, government
reports and statistics.
Have a look at the services
we offer to careers professionals and employers
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