VOL. 12, NO. 120

California State University, Long Beach May 24, 2006
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. News  
 

CSULB women find glass ceiling hard to break



By Jennifer Pollak
Online Forty-Niner
Contributing Writer



Women students at Cal State Long Beach may find it difficult to break the glass ceiling after college. A recent study of California Women Business Leaders, released late February, found the corporate environment of California in last place nationally in regard to women holding leadership positions. Women represent only 8.2 percent of the highest-paid California executives, and only six out of 200 companies had a female chief executive, according to the study.

“The glass ceiling is never going to be broken I don’t think,” said Marcela Chavez, director of the Women’s Resource Center at CSULB. “What’s going to happen in my opinion is the glass ceiling is going to keep getting pulled higher and higher.”

California came in well below the national average of women in top positions in the corporate world, even those with college degrees.

“The concern I have is that even though women are getting more degrees and getting more education, they’re not in the power structure,” Chavez said.

Chavez, director of the Women’s Resource Center since 1991, said she has seen this power struggle with women students at CSULB.

“Every young woman here is concerned about these issues,” said Elyse Blankley, chair of the Department of Women’s Studies at CSULB.

Leann Phillips, a freshman at CSULB, said so far her experience with men versus women professors has been balanced.
“It’s been equal,” Phillips said.

According to CSULB demographics, women in tenured positions fell significantly to second place to men in seven out of nine departments.

“I feel like there’s a lot to be accomplished as far as women having a positive role as well as an administrative role in the work force,” Addye Taylor, a CSULB student, said.

“There are challenges facing women in the workplace. The continuation of glass ceilings, the proliferation of movement is lateral, as opposed to vertical,” Blankley said.

Chavez also said there is not enough mentoring or development for women to get into higher administration.

“I tell students once you go out into the real world it’s going to be very different,” Chavez said.

In a recent meeting with CSULB President F. King Alexander, Chavez brought women’s issues to the surface.

“I met with President Alexander and I told him women’s issues are still the very same. We haven’t made those strides,” Chavez said. “He concurred; he wants to look at different ways of how to help women advance.”


 


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CSULB women find glass ceiling hard to break

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