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  1. 18 de dez. de 2016 · Abstract. This commentary discusses the evolving dynamics and the intergenerational “rifts” that often arise in gender and women’s studies classes. The first section outlines the rise of women’s studies programs in the 1970s and the “women-centered” approach most university women’s studies programs and classes embraced.

    • Lindsey Feitz
    • 2016
  2. Women's educational and occupational achievements are crucial to the economic productivity and prosperity of the nation, as well as to the mental health of women and their families. In this article we review psychological research on motivation and on educational achievement, focusing on gender and the contributions that have been made by ...

    • Janet Shibley Hyde, Kristen C. Kling
    • 2001
  3. 16 de mai. de 2017 · Abstract. This article reports an analysis of the relationship between women’s increased participation in higher education and other recent social changes over the last four decades. To date, women’s increased involvement in higher education has been studied as either a force for or a consequence of other sociocultural changes.

    • Somayeh Parvazian, Judith Gill, Belinda Chiera
    • 2017
  4. ? 2001 Kluwer Academic Publishers. Printed in the Netherlands. Gender studies: A global perspective of their evolution. contribution, and challenges to comparative higher education. NELLY P. STROMQUIST. Rossier School of Education, University of Southern California, USA. Abstract.

  5. 26 de out. de 2015 · Including women in research studies, as the Institute of Medicine notes in its 2001 report, “introduces additional variables (in the form of hormonal cycles) and decreases the homogeneity of the study population” .

    • Carolyn M. Mazure, Daniel P. Jones
    • 2015
  6. 17 de mar. de 2010 · Education. A Look Back At Women’s Studies Since The 1970s. March 17, 201012:00 PM ET. Heard on Tell Me More. 6-Minute Listen. Playlist. In honor of Women's History Month, Tell Me More is...

  7. 21 de mar. de 2021 · By the 2016-17 academic year, women earned 57% of bachelor's degrees awarded in the country. And in 2019, women made up a majority of the U.S. college-educated workforce for the first time in history. Higher education has come a long way since women were excluded. Still, women's success in higher education doesn't always transfer ...