Content Partner
Grades 6-8, 9-12
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Income for most people is determined by the market value of the productive resources they sell. What workers earn depends, primarily, on the market value of what they produce and how productive they are.
Income for most people is determined by the market value of the productive resources they sell. What workers earn depends, primarily, on the market value of what they produce and how productive they are.
Upon completion of this lesson the student will:
[NOTE: Students will be introduced to gender discrimination in the workplace, they will collect and review data to substantiate or refute the existence of gender discrimination, and they will evaluate proposed solutions to this type of discrimination. Think About It: questions follow each section. These questions can be used to lead class discussion, as a guide for group work, or as an evaluative tool if this is an individually assigned lesson. A culminating activity requires students to formulate and express their opinion on this issue and consider the relevance of other arguments.]
Did you know that:
In this lesson students will examine several resources that address gender equity to determine if these disparities in pay for men and women are indeed discrimination or if they are justified. At the end of this lesson students will be asked to form and justify opinions.
The issue: Are wages in the modern workplace “fair”?
Show students the Equal Pay infographic form the Depart of Labor’s Women’s Bureau.
Think About It:
Is there evidence that women and men are paid differently?
Here’s some data to review:
Median Weekly Earnings (2015) of Women and Men in 10 Leading Occupations for Women | ||
Occupations | Women | Men |
1. Secretaries and administrative assistants | $683 | $786 |
2. Cashiers | $405 | $471 |
3. Administrative Services Managers | $981 | $1,451 |
4. Registered nurses | $1,098 | $1,222 |
5. Sales supervisors of non-retail staff | $896 | $1,140 |
6. Bookkeepers, accounting/auditing clerks | $690 | $692 |
7. Nursing aides, orderlies, and attendants | $457 | $526 |
8. Elementary and middle school teachers | $957 | $1,077 |
9. Waiters and waitresses | $411 | $501 |
10. Real estate brokers and sales agents | $735 | $1,052 |
Median of All Occupations | $726 | $895 |
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, http://www.bls.gov/cps/cpsaat39.htm |
Watch this clip from Hillary Clinton’s speech on the Gender Wage Gap on Equal Pay Day 2016 and read the article about her speech from Time magazine.
Use this .pdf on the Gender Wage Gap (Presented by the National Committe on Pay Equity, statistics from Department of Labor) to collect information on mean weekly and annual earnings for men and women. Complete the tables in your worksheet by gathering information on three occupations. Choose one occupation that you think of as a “man’s job,” a second occupation that you think of as a “woman’s job,” and a third occupation that is not one that is traditionally male or female, a job you consider “gender neutral.”
Note: Students will have to calculate the annual earning figures from the weekly figures given. Simply have them multiply the weekly amount by 52 (52 weeks in a year) to get a rough estimate in order to complete the worksheet.
[NOTE: Students should be encouraged and given the opportunity to develop thoughtful answers to the following THINK ABOUT IT questions. This may be in the form of small group or class discussion or through an out-of-class written assignment.]
Think About It:
[NOTE: At this point students should have formed some strong opinions about the existence, or nonexistence, of gender discrimination in the workplace. Encourage open discussion from both viewpoints.]
Think About It:
Content Partner
Grades 6-8, 9-12
Grades K-2, 3-5
Grades 9-12
Grades 9-12