Why did Men leave Teaching in the 1970s: -And Where Did They Go?

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Abstract

Between 1968 and 1980, the ratio of male college freshmen planning to
become a teacher fell from 12.4% to 2.4% and the share of males among
those who aspired to teach dropped from 30.6% to 19.7%. While changes
in women’s labor supply over this period have been studied extensively,
little attention has been paid to shifts in men’s careers. Using nationally
representative data on the career plans of college freshmen I find that
unrestricted access to the birth control pill bears a negative relation to the
likelihood that men plan to teach, while changes in the strength of
teacher unions are unrelated to their career plans. Men’s aspirations shift
away from teaching towards occupations that are associated with higher
average income like accounting and computer programming. These
changes in career plans occur predominantly among men of medium and
low academic ability.
OriginalsprogEngelsk
Publikationsdato2012
Antal sider24
StatusUdgivet - 2012
BegivenhedThe 26th Annual Conference of the European Society for Population Economics 2012 - University of Bern, Bern, Schweiz
Varighed: 20 jun. 201223 jun. 2012
Konferencens nummer: 26
https://sites.google.com/site/especonference2012/

Konference

KonferenceThe 26th Annual Conference of the European Society for Population Economics 2012
Nummer26
LokationUniversity of Bern
Land/OmrådeSchweiz
ByBern
Periode20/06/201223/06/2012
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