Patterson Sarah E, Damaske Sarah, Sheroff Christen
Sarah E. Patterson is a Ph.D. graduate in Sociology and Demography at the Pennsylvania State University.
Sarah Damaske is an assistant professor of Labor and Employment Relations, Sociology and Women's Studies at Pennsylvania State University.
Gend Soc. 2017 Jun;31(3):310-332. doi: 10.1177/0891243217703630. Epub 2017 Apr 10.
This study asks how men's and women's careers diverge following MBA graduation from an elite university, using qualitative interview data from 74 respondents. We discover men and women follow three career pathways post-graduation: lockstep (stable employment), transitory (3 or more employers), and exit (left workforce). While similar proportions of men and women followed the lockstep pathways and launched accelerated careers, sizable gender differences emerged on the transitory pathway; men's careers soared as women's faltered on this path-the modal category for both. On the transitory path, men fared much better than women when moving to new organizations, suggesting that gender may become more salient when people have a shorter work history with a company. Our findings suggest that clear building blocks to promotions reduce gender bias and ambiguity in the promotion process, but multiple external moves hamper women, putting them at a clear disadvantage to men whose forward progress is less likely to be stalled by such moves.
本研究利用来自74名受访者的定性访谈数据,探讨了精英大学MBA毕业后男性和女性的职业发展路径如何分化。我们发现,男性和女性毕业后遵循三种职业路径:稳步发展(稳定就业)、过渡性(换过3个或更多雇主)和退出(离开职场)。虽然男性和女性遵循稳步发展路径并开启加速职业发展的比例相似,但在过渡性路径上出现了显著的性别差异;男性的职业发展蒸蒸日上,而女性在这条路径上却步履蹒跚——这是两者的典型情况。在过渡性路径上,男性在跳槽到新组织时比女性表现好得多,这表明当人们在一家公司的工作经历较短时,性别因素可能会变得更加突出。我们的研究结果表明,明确的晋升基础可以减少晋升过程中的性别偏见和不确定性,但多次外部变动会阻碍女性,使她们明显处于劣势,而男性的职业发展则不太可能因这些变动而停滞不前。