College Majors That Put Women on Equal Footing With MenArticle read 117 times
Want to know if you've chosen the right path? New research by PayScale analyzed millions of employee profiles to see how that gender pay gap varies by college major.
Published in The New York Times, February 15 2012
The typical full-time female worker still earns about 81 cents for every dollar that her male counterpart earns. As we’ve written before, much of that wage gap can be explained by the types of careers the different women go into as well as other demographic considerations, like education, age and experience. Even after controlling for those factors, though, an unexplained gap still exists across nearly every job category. The gap is particularly large in the highest-paying professions. PayScale, a company that collects salary data, has analyzed its database of millions of employee profiles to see how that gender pay gap varies by college major. (Note: Workers opt into PayScale’s database, rather than being randomly selected. PayScale has said that it regularly compares its data to those from the Labor Department and other sources to make sure its numbers appear accurate and representative.) Here are the comparisons for the pay of men and women whose highest degree was a bachelor’s, after controlling for demographic differences (but not hours worked, since PayScale does not collect that information). Higher percentage difference in the last column indicate that men earn a bigger premium over women who studied the same subject:
As you can see, the only one of these disciplines that graduates women who earn more than their equivalent male counterparts is information technology. Mechanical engineering and management information systems have about equivalent earnings. The majors whose male graduates earn the biggest premium over female graduates are architecture, education and criminal justice.
These data exclude workers who went on to get graduate degrees. The numbers are based on over 1,000 employee profiles for each major, ranging from 15,000 for accounting to 1,200 for social work. Read the full article in The New York Times
Posted by Virginie Long on 02/16/2012
Rate it
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Contact : womentomorrow@womentomorrow.com
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||