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25 tháng 4 2021

If you agree:
- Married women should not pursue careers because after getting married, women are busy with housework and taking care of their children. During pregnancy, a woman will not be able to function naturally, after giving birth, her health will gradually weaken and need more support and care before she can return to her original healthy state. And if so, the man can also go to work, manage the family economy. When a husband has to work hard to earn every dollar in society, a woman only needs to stay at home and help her husband take care of and teach the children.

25 tháng 4 2021

If you disagree:
- If women pursue a career, they will have income to support themselves, to do what they want and be able to help their parents. In addition, women pursuing a career will also bear the family a cost and can also help the husband to improve at work, will be supported by the woman and correct his shortcomings. if both are the same profession. At that time, women will also not have to rely on men, can have a private and comfortable life, not rely on men's money and also won't let men work hard outside. The couple will share each other's burdens and have a happy family

31 tháng 1 2020

Mothers should be strongly discouraged from working outside the home.

First, women have traditional roles as housewives and housekeepers. They should stay home, doing housework and looking after their husbands and children. In extendec I families where more than two generations live together, women are also the main care­givers for elderly people.

Secondly, working mothers do not have enough time. Men’s work finish at the office, bu: women’s work is extended to their households. After an eight-hour working day, these exhausted women have to do household chores, take care of their husbands and children without having time to relax.

Finally, working mothers can not be good workers. Tiring and boring chores at home negatively affect women’s tasks in their working place. They can not concentrate or work effectively as those who do not have to worry about taking kids to school, picking them up after school and doing housework.

Clearly, mothers should not be encouraged to work outside the home.

~~~Learn Well Nguyễn Gia Bích~~~

1 tháng 2 2020

thank bạn nhìu

28 tháng 11 2017

Đáp án: C

26 tháng 2 2022

A

26 tháng 2 2022

Mark the letter A, B, C, or D to indicate the word(s) OPPOSITE in meaning to the underlined word(s) in each of the following questions.

Many people of this country still hold a firm belief that married women shouldn’t pursue a career.

A. attempt            B. abandon             C. achieve             D. attack

24 tháng 2 2022

A

26 tháng 2 2022

B: Abandon (Từ bỏ/Bỏ rơi) - pursue (v): Truy đuổi

24 tháng 2 2022

B

26 tháng 7 2017

Đáp án: B

2 tháng 3 2019

It would be challenging to broach this topic without first talking about gender stereotypes. Stereotypes are human, normal, and useful. They are mental shortcuts that help us make sense of our world. We use them all the time and they do not always lead us to make inaccurate judgments about people and situations. However, when it comes to gender, our society has some well-defined stereotypes about men and women and their traits and skills, especially in the workplace. For example, it is believed that men are callous and often too proud to ask for help and women are overly dramatic and emotional. Those underlying stereotypical beliefs interfere with our expectations of the genders in different contexts. When it comes to leadership, male behavior is often more in line with what is expected of a strong leader (see “Think Manager-Think Male”, Schein (1973, 2007)) while women are expected to be warm and caring and thought to be unwilling to make difficult decisions. How true are these stereotypes?

Do gender differences exist when it comes to being an effective leader?

To answer this question, we first must ask ourselves what makes an effective leader – regardless of gender. What behaviors, traits, and characteristics are valued in a strong leader? A common model used to understand leadership breaks leadership behaviors down into two large categories – people and results. Blake and Mouton (1964) established a managerial leadership grid which places leaders into quadrants depending on how much emphasis they place on people and results separately. A highly dynamic, charismatic, transformational, and effective leader is high on people and results. Within these larger categories are key leadership competencies such as coaching, motivating, and openness in the people grouping, and performance management, analysis, and accountability in the results grouping. If one were to apply gender stereotypes to this model, it might be hypothesized that women leaders would be more effective in the people competencies and men would be more effective in the results competencies.

Related: The Top 5 Skills of Effective Leaders

Let's consult the research

As you can imagine, researchers have wanted to know if this is true. Studies have examined how men and women are rated on leadership performance across these competencies. A study conducted on over 7,000 leaders using 360 performance data to explore gender differences on 16 leadership competencies found that women were rated significantly higher than men on 12 of the 16 competencies (Zenger & Folkman, 2012). These competencies represented both people and results categories. Men were rated higher on strategy development. No differences were seen for technical expertise, innovation, or connecting to the outside world. These results are promising for women leaders who are often seen as less competent and effective, but it is just one study.

In 2014, a group of researchers conducted a meta-analysis on gender and leadership effectiveness. They pulled together 95 studies to identify consistent trends in the relationships across research that spanned 49 years. They reviewed self and other ratings of performance effectiveness and found that overall, there are no strong significant differences between the genders on leadership effectiveness. When they broke down the data and looked at moderating variables, they did find some interesting differences:

  • Women are being viewed as more effective in recent years as compared to decades ago.

  • Men were rated as more effective in male-dominated organizations (e.g., government).

  • Men rated themselves higher in self-report measures than women across the board.

  • Women were rated as more effective in middle management roles.

  • Women were rated as more effective by others (not self) across the board.

Select International conducts leadership assessments across levels and industries. We looked at our own leadership assessment data and drew a similar conclusion. When it comes to effectiveness, there are no strong gender differences. Men and women are rated equally effective in leadership competencies.

leadership competencies by gender are women better leaders-143711-edited

Lastly, the American Psychological Association published an article, Men and Women: No Big Difference, stating the same conclusion: “Studies show that one's ***** has little or no bearing on personality, cognition and leadership.”

Okay, so what does this mean? This is good news! The research points to the conclusion that men and women can both be effective leaders. There isn’t anything about gender that makes one leader better than another. If this is true, then why are there fewer women leaders, especially at the top of the organization? In future blogs we will examine some of the theories around why women are not represented in the upper echelons of the organization and discuss the research around them.

(It only used for refer).