Women's eNews
Posts tagged child care
Child Care Director Is Also Diaper-Changer in Chief
By Diane Loupe
DECATUR, Ga. (WOMENSENEWS)—Dawn has just begun to melt the navy blue night sky and morning birds are chirping when Connie Moore’s day begins.
By 6 a.m., the director of the Suburban Nursery School and Pre-K in Decatur, Ga., is in her white Toyota picking up her center’s longtime cook, Gloria Sewell, from a nearby station of MARTA, the mass transit system. Sewell’s day begins 45 minutes earlier at her home in southwest Atlanta.
Back at the center, Moore will switch out of her role as chauffeur and play the various parts of administrator, counselor, bookkeeper, teacher and diaper-changer…Read more
Atlantic Runs Screed Against Working Families
via Womens eNews
by Caryl Rivers
In this sexist and highly inaccurate article, Nemko tells us,
“The media influences how men and women are treated, and how boys perceive themselves relative to girls. Whether in commercials, sitcoms or movies, even in non-fictional media, men are disproportionately characterized as sleazebags or doofuses shown the way by wise women.”
What about the media portrayal of girls and women? A major report on girls by the American Psychological Association in 2007 found the media emphasizing young women’s sexuality “to a stunning degree.” It said, “if girls learn that behaving like sexual objects gains approval from society and from people whose opinions they respect, they may begin to ‘self-sexualize;’ in fact, to become their own worst enemies as far as achievement is concerned.”…If men get short shrift, women are arguably treated even worse.
Nemko also makes assertions that fly in the face of facts, research and data.
“In honest conversation, most people will agree that, on average, men are more often willing to do the things it takes to get promoted, for example, to make time to take advanced technical courses by forgoing recreation such as sports or shopping,” he wrote. That contradicts his own premise of a female takeover of the economy. It also defies a study this month by the Pew Research Center that finds that young women express a higher degree of career ambition than male counterparts and earn 60 percent of master’s degrees.

