More Men Enter Fields Dominated by Women

*       by SHAILA DEWAN and ROBERT GEBELOFF 
*       May 20, 2012  NY Times

 

Donning the 'Pink Collar': A New York Times analysis finds that more and
more men are starting to see the many benefits of jobs long-dominated by
women.

HOUSTON - Wearing brick-red scrubs and chatting in Spanish, Miguel Alquicira
settled a tiny girl into an adult-size dental chair and soothed her through
a set of X-rays. Then he ushered the dentist, a woman, into the room and
stayed on to serve as interpreter. 

A male dental assistant, Mr. Alquicira is in the minority. But he is also
part of a distinctive, if little noticed, shift in workplace gender
patterns. Over the last decade, men have begun flocking to fields long the
province of women. 

Mr. Alquicira, 21, graduated from high school in a desolate job market, one
in which the traditional opportunities, like construction and manufacturing,
for young men without a college degree had dried up. After career counselors
told him that medical fields were growing, he borrowed money for an
eight-month training course. Since then, he has had no trouble finding jobs
that pay $12 or $13 an hour. 

He gave little thought to the fact that more than 90 percent of dental
assistants and hygienists are women. But then, young men like Mr. Alquicira
have come of age in a world of inverted expectations, where women far
outpace men in earning degrees and tend to hold jobs that have turned out to
be, by and large, more stable, more difficult to outsource, and more likely
to grow. 

"The way I look at it," Mr. Alquicira explained, without a hint of awareness
that he was turning the tables on a time-honored feminist creed, "is that
anything, basically, that a woman can do, a guy can do." 

After years of economic pain, Americans remain an optimistic lot, though
they define the American dream not in terms of mansions and luxury cars but
as something more basic - a home, a college degree, financial security and
enough left over for a few extras like dining out, according to a study by
the Pew Center on the States' Economic Mobility Project
<http://www.pewstates.org/uploadedFiles/PCS_Assets/2009/EMP_2009poll_ppt%281
%29.pdf> . That financial security usually requires a steady full-time job
with benefits, something that has become harder to find, particularly for
men and for those without a college degree. While women continue to make
inroads into prestigious, high-wage professions dominated by men, more men
are reaching for the dream in female-dominated occupations that their
fathers might never have considered. 

The trend began well before the crash, and appears to be driven by a variety
of factors, including financial concerns, quality-of-life issues and a
gradual erosion of gender stereotypes. An analysis of census data by The New
York Times shows that from 2000 to 2010, occupations that are more than 70
percent female accounted for almost a third of all job growth for men,
double the share of the previous decade. 

That does not mean that men are displacing women - those same occupations
accounted for almost two-thirds of women's job growth. But in Texas, for
example, the number of men who are registered nurses nearly doubled in that
time period, rising to 22,532 from 12,709, and increasing the percentage of
male nurses to 10.5 percent, from 8.4 percent.  Men make up 23 percent of
Texas public schoolteachers, but almost 28 percent of first-year teachers. 

The shift includes low-wage jobs as well. Nationally, two-thirds more men
were bank tellers, almost twice as many were receptionists and two-thirds
more were waiting tables in 2010 than a decade earlier. 

Even more striking is the type of men who are making the shift. From 1970 to
1990, according to a study by Mary Gatta, the senior scholar at Wider
Opportunities for Women, and Patricia A. Roos, a sociologist at Rutgers, men
who took so-called pink-collar jobs tended to be foreign-born non-English
speakers with low education levels - men who, in other words, had few
choices. 

Now, though, the trend has spread among men of nearly all races and ages,
more than a third of whom have a college degree. In fact, the shift is most
pronounced among young, white, college-educated men like Charles Reed, a
sixth-grade math teacher at Patrick Henry Middle School in Houston. 

Mr. Reed, 25, intended to go to law school after a two-year stint with Teach
for America, but he fell in love with the job. Though he says the recession
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/r/recession_an
d_depression/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier>  had little to do with his
career choice, he believes the tough times that have limited the prospects
for new law school graduates have also helped make his father, a lawyer,
more accepting. 

Still, Mr. Reed said of his father, "In his mind, I'm just biding time until
I decide to jump into a better profession." 

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: May 21, 2012

An earlier version of this article misstated the increase in male registered
nurses between 2000 and 2010. While the actual number of male nurses almost
doubled, the percentage rose to 10.5 percent from 8.4 percent, not to almost
12 percent from a little over 9 percent.

  _____  

(Page 2 of 2)

To the extent that the shift to "women's work" has been accelerated by
recession, the change may reverse when the economy recovers. "Are boys today
saying, 'I want to grow up and be a nurse?' " asked Heather Boushey, senior
economist at the Center for American Progress. "Or are they saying, 'I want
a job that's stable and recession proof?' " 

In interviews, however, about two dozen men played down the economic
considerations, saying that the stigma associated with choosing such jobs
had faded, and that the jobs were appealing not just because they offered
stable employment, but because they were more satisfying. 

"I.T. is just killing viruses and clearing paper jams all day," said Scott
Kearney, 43, who tried information technology and other fields before
becoming a nurse in the pediatric intensive care unit at Children's Memorial
Hermann Hospital in Houston. 

Daniel Wilden, a 26-year-old Army veteran and nursing student at the
University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, said he had gained
respect for nursing when he saw a female medic use a Leatherman tool to save
the life of his comrade. "She was a beast," he said admiringly. 

More than a few men said their new jobs had turned out to be far harder than
they imagined. 

But these men can expect success. Men earn more than women even in
female-dominated jobs. And white men in particular who enter those fields
easily move up to supervisory positions, a phenomenon known as the glass
escalator <http://gas.sagepub.com/content/23/1/5.abstract>  - as opposed to
the glass ceiling that women encounter in male-dominated professions, said
Adia Harvey Wingfield, a sociologist at Georgia State University. More men
in an occupation can also raise wages for everyone, though as yet men's
share of these jobs has not grown enough to have an overall effect on pay. 

"Simply because higher-educated men are entering these jobs does not mean
that it will result in equality in our workplaces," said Ms. Gatta of Wider
Opportunities for Women. 

Still, economists have long tried to figure out how to encourage more
integration in the work force. Now, it seems to be happening of its own
accord. 

"I hated my job every single day of my life," said John Cook, 55, who got a
modest inheritance that allowed him to leave the company where he earned
$150,000 a year as a database consultant and enter nursing school. 

His starting salary will be about a third what he once earned, but database
consulting does not typically earn hugs like the one Mr. Cook recently
received from a girl after he took care of her premature baby sister. "It's
like, people get paid for doing this kind of stuff?" Mr. Cook said, choking
up as he recounted the episode. 

Several men cited the same reasons for seeking out pink-collar work that
have drawn women to such careers: less stress and more time at home. At John
G. Osborne Elementary, Adrian Ortiz, 42, joked that he was one of the few
Mexicans who made more in his native country, where he was a hard-working
lawyer, than he did in the United States as a kindergarten teacher in a
bilingual classroom. "Now," he said, "my priorities are family, 100
percent." 

Betsey Stevenson, a labor economist at the Wharton School at the University
of Pennsylvania, said she was not surprised that changing gender roles at
home, where studies show men are shouldering more of the domestic burden and
spending more time parenting, are now showing up in career choices. 

"We tend to study these patterns of what's going on in the family and what's
going on in the workplace as separate, but they're very much intertwined,"
she said. "So as attitudes in the family change, attitudes toward the
workplace have changed." 

In a classroom at Houston Community College, Dexter Rodriguez, 35, said his
job in tech support had not been threatened by the tough economy.
Nonetheless, he said, his family downsized the house, traded the new cars
for used ones and began to live off savings, all so Mr. Rodriguez could
train for a career he regarded as more exciting. 

"I put myself into the recession," he said, "because I wanted to go to
nursing school." 

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: May 21, 2012

An earlier version of this article misstated the increase in male registered
nurses between 2000 and 2010. While the actual number of male nurses almost
doubled, the percentage rose to 10.5 percent from 8.4 percent, not to almost
12 percent from a little over 9 percent.

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/21/business/increasingly-men-seek-success-in-
jobs-dominated-by-women.html?nl=afternoonupdate
<http://www.nytimes.com/2012/05/21/business/increasingly-men-seek-success-in
-jobs-dominated-by-women.html?nl=afternoonupdate&emc=edit_au_20120521>
&emc=edit_au_20120521

 

 

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