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Search resuls for: "Sapna Cheryan"


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Opinion | College Grads, Do ‘Follow Your Passions’
  + stars: | 2023-06-04 | by ( ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
She found that if young people are encouraged to follow their passions, they tend to conform to societal expectations of traditional gender norms: Men choose sciences, women choose arts. If the future is indeed female (my hope), then women cannot wait around for society’s expectations to change. Some unsolicited advice for young women, at the risk of mansplaining:1) Don’t worry about what major you choose in college. Most college graduates ultimately build careers in areas of work that have little bearing on what their college major was. 2) Attend a college that offers a five-year degree program, with plenty of internship opportunities in the field you think you are interested in.
Persons: Sapna Cheryan, Therese Anne Mortejo
We found that when it came to pursuing male-dominated fields like computer science and engineering, gender gaps were greater when students chose to follow their passions, with men disproportionately choosing those fields. We also found that gender gaps in selecting potential future occupations were smaller when we asked people of both genders to prioritize nurturing and emotionally supporting other people. That is, if you encourage women and men to follow their passions in selecting a major or career, there is a big gender gap. If you encourage them to make money, there is less of a gender gap, with more women skewing toward traditionally masculine fields. Are we suggesting that women shouldn’t pursue their passions and should enter fields that they don’t really care about just to close gender gaps?
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