Context of Career Decisions: Women Reared in a Rural Community

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Abstract

This study investigated the influences on the career decisions of women who grew up in a rural community. Forty women were interviewed who graduated in the upper 10% of their high school classes in the 1950s, '60s, '70s, and '80s. The results are described in three components: gender role beliefs, factors, and contexts. Gender role beliefs were the most pervasive influences found. Other factors were (a) information, (b) meeting others' expectations, (c) barriers, (d) sense of empowerment, (e) conditions of work, and (f) personal values. The participants were also affected by their social and historical contexts and their development stages.

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Vermeulen, M. E., & Minor, C. W. (1998). Context of Career Decisions: Women Reared in a Rural Community. Career Development Quarterly, 46(3), 230–245. https://doi.org/10.1002/j.2161-0045.1998.tb00698.x

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