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LINGERING NUANCES: GENDERED CAREER MOTIVATIONS AND ASPIRATIONS OF FIRST-YEAR LAW STUDENTS
12
Citations
16
References
2007
Year
Career InterventionGender IdentityCareer MotivationsLaw SchoolGender StudiesLingering NuancesSociologyMotivationCareer TrajectoriesCareer DevelopmentEducationCareer ConcernGendered ContextGender DivideCareer EducationFeminist TheoryHigher EducationSocial Sciences
This study examined students' career motivations and aspirations at the beginning of their legal education and after one semester in law school. Interviews with 29 law students within the first few weeks of their first semester revealed interesting differences in women's and men's long-term, but not short-term, career ambitions: notably women had lower expectations for their career trajectories than did men. Work and family concerns also played a role in women's perception of possible career paths and were defined by both women and men as potential barriers to their careers. Follow-up interviews with the same students after their first semester in law school also exposed the different experiences of the law students based mostly on their gender and grades. After one semester of law school and after first-year grades were received, the gendered reactions to their grades provided insight into women's and men's perceptions of viable career options.
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