Sociology of Work Log in
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% Maggie Wiesner completed

PART A

In her essay, “Doing Gender by Giving ‘Good Service’”, Elaine Hall discusses two identifiable approaches to the relationship between gender and organizations: the gender-in-organization approach and the gendered organization approach. Hall goes on to assert that the gendered organization approach has more explanatory power in addressing the way gender is constructed within and between restaurants.

Hall begins by describing the gender-in-organization approach. This approach states that in organizations in which both males and females work, the organizations themselves are where people behave differently, according to their genders (Hall, p.453).  She continues that the stereotypical characteristics of genders that people have learned from society carry out in the workplace, perhaps to be able to cope with the jobs they must perform (Hall, p.453).  This approach asserts that males and females work differently and therefore bring this to work with them (Hall, p454).

Contrastingly, the gendered organization approach posits that because jobs themselves are gendered, people act according to their genders at work (Hall, p.454). This approach sees gender differently than the gender-in-organization approach and states that instead of one’s gender being brought to work with them, the job determines how males and females behave differently at work (Hall, p.454).  Specifically, some jobs require females to “do” their gender and behave effeminately at work (Hall, pps.454-455).

Because of the gendered organization’s belief that people do not bring their gender to work with them, but the work brings out people’s genders, this approach can better explain the way gender is constructed at work. Hall first points out three ways in which restaurants “do” gender.  First, restaurants see serving customers as women’s work, since it creates a feeling of caring for people the way a mother would care for her own family (Hall, p.455).  Restaurants perpetuate the stereotype of the female servant, as although both males and females make up wait staff, it is the females who are treated more poorly (Hall, p.456).  Finally, restaurants set up and allow interactions with females to be viewed as sexual objects, by both other staff and patrons (Hall, p.456).

While restaurants themselves set the stage for how males and females are treated according to their genders and therefore behave differently, the employees are also treated differently by their patrons. In the research that Hall did, she studied five different restaurants of three different prestige ranks, all of which employed both males and females.  Hall also looked at three different types of scripts that servers use with their patrons-friendliness, deference, and flirting.  It was found that females were told to smile more and were seen as friendlier than their male counterparts.  Although both males and females were treated as servants at times, females were often given the silent treatment and treated more like servants than the males.  Flirting was also done by males and females, but females were also sexually harassed and felt more ashamed of their flirtatious behavior than did the males.

The gendered organization approach is much more in line with Hall’s findings of males and females being treated differently at work, by their employers as well as the people they serve. This, in turn, causes them to react differently, usually in ways that are more congruent with their assigned genders.

 

PART B

In “The Wage Penalty for Motherhood”, authors Budig and England highlight the notion that mothers earn lower wages than women who do not have children.  They refer to this decrease in wages as a “penalty”, as it seems that being a mother punishes a woman when it comes to earning money at work.  Budig and England discuss five different possible explanations for the correlation between being a mother and earning lower wages.

The first explanation is that motherhood causes women to lose work experience, thus allowing employers to pay them less.  The longer one is at a job, the more time they will have had to gain seniority as well as attend trainings, which presumably makes them more productive workers (Budig and England, p.205).  Additionally, workers with more seniority are paid higher wages so that companies can keep staff employed that they have already invested time and money into (Budig and England, p.206).  Budig and England also note that when comparing women who have an equal amount of experience in the workforce, it is those women who do not have gaps in their experience that are paid higher (Budig and England, p.206).

The second explanation is presumptuous of employers’ ideas of motherhood.  Budig and England state that many employers assume that mothers are less productive at work because they are drained from working ‘second shifts’ at home after they leave work, or they are saving up their energy to be more present at home with their families (Budig and England, p.206).  If mothers are not drained at work, then they are preoccupied with thoughts of their children, are doing things at work for them, or are even calling in sick to tend to them (Budig and England, p.207).

The third explanation is that mothers seek jobs that fit better into their schedules of also having a family to care for.  Unfortunately, jobs that are part-time, do not require travel, do not require weekend hours, or that allow employees to make personal calls at work may not pay as highly as more demanding jobs.  Employers know that if they offer these extra ‘perks’, they are able to get away with paying lower wages, taking advantage of mothers (Budig and England, p.207).  As long as mothers are willing to settle for this, employers will continue to do it (Budig and England, p.207).

The fourth explanation is blatant discrimination such as paying women with children lower wages and promoting them less (Budig and England, p.208).  While this is not illegal, sex discrimination is, so it must be proved that an employer is not treating all of their parents differently, but their parents who are women specifically (Budig and England, p.209).  Again, this may be difficult to prove, but as long as employees are silenced, changes will not be made.

The final explanation of the correlation between motherhood and earning low wages states that there may not be causation.  Budig and England posit that perhaps situations that lead to lower-paying jobs for mothers may also just happen to correlate with higher rates of having children (Budig and England, p.210).  Examples given are: lower academic skills and caring less about being rich (Budig and England, p.210).  If these characteristics are present in someone who then has children, it cannot be said that they are paid less because they are mothers.

All of Budig and England’s possible explanations as to why mothers earn lower wages in the workforce seem valid.  Again, if people are not standing up to this injustice to create change, the reasons why do not really matter.

 

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% Elizabeth Bullock completed

Due: December 7th. If you plan to complete the midterm extra credit assignment please follow the instructions below. Please keep in mind that these assignments will be evaluated according to the original question raised in the exam and the rubric that is posted under “resources.”

If you received a high score on the exam but would like to revise one of your essays, you can. In this case I recommend you confer with me (in person or via e-mail) prior to completing the assignment.

1. After you have completed the assignment, access our course on Blackboard. Choose “extra credit” from the menu on the right hand side, and upload your assignment.

2. On the last day of class, bring in a hard copy of your assignment and the original midterm exam. You will not receive extra credit on the assignment unless you hand in the bluebook with your revised essay.

Y Teach-In at Hunter

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% Elizabeth Bullock completed

As discussed last night, in lieu of meeting next week this two part assignment is due on Wednesday, November 23th, by midnight. Word count: 800 words total. Please make sure everything is in your own words. If you paraphrase, make sure to include the proper citation. We will discuss both essays when we return to class on Wednesday, November 30th.

Part A: In Elaine Hall’s (1993) essay titled “Doing Gender By Giving ‘Good Service,'” she notes two identifiable approaches to the relationship between gender and organizations that can be found in research dating from the 1970s. Using details from the text, explain how Hall distinguishes these two approaches. Why does Hall believe the gendered organization model has more explanatory power when it comes to addressing the way gender is constructed within and between restaurants?

Part B: In their essay “The Wage Penalty for Motherhood,” Michelle Budig and Paula England review data that supports the claim that women in their “childbearing years” are more likely to be paid less than male counterparts for the same work. Review some of the explanations for this phenomenon, as addressed by Budig and England.

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% Maria Gallardo completed

Many say that you don’t know what someone is going thru until you walk a mile in their shoes. Barbara Ehrenreich set out to be different and achieve a thru life experience on how people are living on the pay they have from their low-wages jobs. In on of my other classes I had to do some readings on Ehrenreich, where she tells her story as an undercover maid which is what she also discuss in this chapter. Knowing her reading and previous works, I have to say that Ehrenreich benefits from living the real life experience. She could have gone out and interview couple people about their lives, and how they go on living pay check to pay, however, it would not have the same real life effect as for her to do the old school style journalism.
Ehrenreich benefits from putting herself thru the actual life experience many have to face on a daily basis to have a job that supports their families. She begins to set rules for herself, just in case she can’t any longer take it. Then her search for a place to live and describes how it was difficult to find a place to feel as you are home, finds herself finding places that are no safe to live in or they are no clean. Anyone living on a pay check to pay check low-wage job does not have money for a security deposit; therefore, she has to settle for what she can afford. If she were just interviewing people who live on low-wage jobs, she would not have felt the anxieties when she wasn’t able to find a place to call home. The feeling of anxiety from living in an unsafe, unclean place are not acquired from interviewing people or researching statics.
As she begins her job search, she also faces the channels of not having the proper wardrobe for an office job. An individual who lives from a low wage job would not have a closet full of business wardrobe or the privilege to go shopping for some. Therefore she has to settle to pay for her motel six room. Although Ehrenreich stuck to living her research as much as a person serving and struggle with a low wage job or on the search on, at the end of the day she could always pull out her ATM card and bail herself out of nay problem she faced. Her determination to stick to living as a low wage person gave her the insight on how many have to live paycheck to paycheck without the security of having a job or the education required for a better job. Ehrenreich benefits from sticking to her research and for the short amount of time was able to walk in their shoes.

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% Denise Hines completed

In Nickel and Dimed Ehrenreich uses an old fashion method of journalism but going undercover as a low wageworker that “just” got off of welfare. I think there are benefits and drawbacks to this way of conducting research.

Ehrenreich particularly did not conduct her research in an authentic way because she did have some “cushions” to try to make her research a little easier. Generally a woman just coming off of public assistance would not have the luxury of having access to a vehicle. Ehrenreich was able to find affordable long term housing in motel while she looked for a place to live which seemed to be standard for people with low income in Portland Maine where she decided to conduct some of her research. Maine was a location that she chose in order to conduct her research in a area that was very “white” in order to avoid the pressures of being in a low wage work force with other races that would be typical workers in the service industries. Maine was so white that this would not be an issue. She discovers that this is a similar place as some of the other locations that she has been conducting her research. Similar jobs to attain with similar wages for the unskilled woman.

Ehrenreich was able to get jobs as a dietary aide and also as a maid without having any experience in these fields. She is able to meet people/Co Workers at these jobs and is able to learn a different perspective of some of the other struggles these individuals face such as limited funds for childcare or the uneasiness of having to leave your child with someone that you do not fully trust. Also, the struggles of not being able to take a day off because your job will not be secured if you miss a day of work. Being able to have an insider’s perspective of her co-workers was the real benefit of putting herself in this position to conduct this research.

I do partially agree that Ehrenreich did not need to leave her home to fully conduct this research. I think that she could have gotten testimony from different people of all races and from a few different age groups in order to get some stories of what it is like to live as a low wage worker. Besides the benefit of meeting the people she worked with and knowing their stories, I feel like Ehrenreich being a white woman in America who is educated has a slight upper hand compared to others that are living below the poverty line without even realizing it.

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% Toniann German completed

Toniann German

Soc#Ass.7

I feel what Terkel is arguing is that in order to understand the true meaning of work ethic we must separate the idea that work is about making money.  Rather Terkel suggest that we must find meaning within the work that we do. Even if you are stuck in jobs we may not like, we must take pride in what we are doing. His example of the waitress may show that although to some her job may seem simple, To the waitress it is meaningful.  She takes pride in that she is good at her job and provides great service to her customers. The waitress takes pride in making her customers happy. I feel that although the work may not be enjoyable Terkle wants us to look at how our work is benefiting our lives and values.

I believe that because we live in a world were work ethic is not viewed in Terkles point of view, society has had to try to sell happiness along with their products. For example, most of us have heard the saying service with a smile. This is because many people are being told to fake smiles and fake their happiness in order to make sales. Instead Terkel is saying that we must find joy in what we do so we can provide a real joyful experience.

There is a human disconnect from work, Terkel expresses how the people through his interviews felt as if humans no longer matter in their work. Terkel brings up the point of human jobs being taken over by technology. As a result people no longer feel as if they are being noticed or appreciated in their jobs in addition to feeling as if they are not making a difference.  I also found his interviews with the blue-collar workers and the white-collar workers very interesting. I found it very surprising that in both types of work the employees felt unhappiness and at times invisible.

Although I agree with Terkel in that it is important to find happiness within your work, especially because not everyone has the option to purse their dreams. I do however think that it is easier said than done. It is very hard to find happiness in a job which you work in only to maintain your survival. It is hard to find happiness in work where you are unappreciated, underpaid, and replaceable by machinery.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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% Albert Felipe completed

The benefit author Barbara Ehrenreich obtains as described in her book Nickel and Dimed is not one that is measured by charts and graphs, but by experiencing the relationship and struggle people have with low wage earnings and how they maintain their everyday lives. In her book, Ehrenreich decides to shed her current “work life” as a writer and scholar, and become one of the low wage working class. The author sets to obtain low paying jobs with little to no experience and obtain housing throughout her experiment. She has also set some guidelines for herself in which she strips down her skills and experience, she must take the highest paying low wage jobs and take the cheapest rent option when seeking where to live. Ehrenreich states that she does go into this experiment with some advantage, but she is not dismissing the disadvantages the majority of low wage workers in America experience. While she provides herself some necessities such as a car and not subjecting herself to homelessness or hunger, her journey to experience life as a low wage earner in this society presents itself to be a difficult one.

In the second chapter Scrubbing in Maine, Ehrenreich decides to conduct her experiment in an environment where her “whiteness” is common among the masses. She, who is a white woman, argues that she chooses this environment so that she can get into the low wage workforce with very little involvement of race and prejudices. She stays at a motel while she secures employment and simultaneously tries to find a place to live. She obtains two jobs in Maine; one as a dietary aide in a nursing home on weekends and one as a house cleaner at a home cleaning service. She also obtains housing that can be sustained with her earning wage, but we quickly discover that making ends meet becomes a challenge. We also quickly discover that her relationship to work is one that subjects her to adjust things such as what she eats, her health and how she relates with her co-workers. It is an environment that ultimately tells the tale of how low wage earnings and high stress jobs do not fulfill even the basics of living everyday life.

I truly believe that the goal of Ehrenreich immersing herself into this experiment is one that was necessary. While we can easily use numbers and others stories to measure results easily, the overall experience she demonstrates in the pieces shows the human connection along with the difficulties and sacrifices one has to go through on a day to day when earning low wages. It is within those experiences that we tend to discover the relationship one has to work and life. Where human beings struggle to make ends meet in a society that asks so much in return as far as wages are concerned, it is proof positive that the value one equates to the level of work one does is not balanced in any way.

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% Marien Burgos completed

Nickel and Dimed by Barbara Ehrenreich is the research she decides to do about the hardship people in American go through because of low wages. Her curiosity lead to do this research by incorporating herself in the lives and circumstances must people in America go through every day. Her family recommended she do the research without living throw it, the way people making low wages do. Her family at first weren’t too keen on her decision but she made her choice.

The day she started her research she made some rules for safety reasons she would have a car either her own or a rental and she would have some extra money for the beginning of her research. She went into this experiment with some privileges most people having a low-income job don’t have. She started job hunting but rapidly understood that in order to get a job it is necessary to have a place to live an address to write down on the applications. Similarly, she realized that she was looking for jobs in a predominantly black area where she stood out. This is when Ehrenreich chooses to do her research in Maine because is predominantly white and she would fit in.

This experience gave her the chance to see firsthand the struggles low income families go thought to survive in this country. Ehrenreich was able to see how difficult it is to find a livable space making minimal wage. She saw how some people had to struggle and basically live like animals because they can’t afford better living conditions. Correspondingly she experienced how many people get sick or injured but continue to work though it because either can’t afford to go to the hospital or can miss a day’s work because of fear of losing that precious job.  This gave her the opportunity to feel the frustration must of us go through with our employers, when they choose the job at hand instead of our health or sometimes safety.

Certainly, if Ehrenreich hadn’t made the decision to experience the life of low income families first hand and follow her family’s advice, this research would not have been the same. Even though she had the privilege of knowing the struggles she was going though were temporary and that if she was going hungry she would buy something to eat, she really tried to stick though the struggles like many of her coworkers. This made her research feel more authentic to her.

 

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% Sharlene Santos completed

When reading the chapters, Enrenreich realizes that people who work two or more jobs and are in poverty cannot afford food or shelter.  She cant imagine how people who work $8.00 an hour or less can survive so she wants to find out how. She starts by telling us what she is going to do and how she is going to do it. She cant use any of her education skills, she will take the highest paying job and make it her best to keep it and find the most accommodating place to live. She looks for a place to live and settling on a $500 a month efficiency apartment, and this is the start of her low-wage life, taking place in Key West Florida. The struggles of applying for jobs and no one calls you back until eventually, she finds a waitressing position. She explains how she works from 2:00 in the evening to 10.00 at night for $2.43 an hour plus tips. She tells us how wages are too low and rent is too high. She was giving another job as a housekeeper and a dietary aid on the weekends. She learns about different types of medications for pain and how she basically ended up feeding an entire alzhiemers ward all by herself. She tells us about the conditions and how sad it is to see.  This was an experiment that she will never forget, and if she didn’t take the chance to experience it she would of never know how it is like for people that are less fortunate. Who don’t have the same access too things as she does. My own personal opinion I believe that a single mother can survive without welfare. Enrenreich realizes that poor are poor and there is almost no escape from it. She learns that people with low or no education, have fewer opportunties, low-wage workers have few options and that is it hard of people to change their lives.