
What’s the cause of the problem part two
This is the fourth post in a series of posts inspired by reading Sheryl Sandberg’s book, Lean In: Women, Work, and the Will to Lead.
Previously we discussed lack of confidence as one of the causes that Sandberg cites for the lack of women in leadership roles. Another reason she gives is pregnancy and childrearing. It’s not just that women leave the workforce when they give birth, it’s also that they factor pregnancy and childrearing into decisions about whether or not to take on bigger roles and more responsibilities — “they leave before they leave,” Sandberg says. (Sandberg, 2013, p. 93)
Sandberg encourages women to take the opposite approach. If they are interested in achieving more, she encourages them to pursue bigger roles and more responsibility. “The months and years leading up to having children are not the time to lean back, but the critical time to lean in.” (Sandberg, 2013, p. 95)
“In 2006, the researchers released a report summarizing their findings, which concluded that ‘children who were cared for exclusively by their mothers did not develop differently than those who were also cared for by others.’ They found no gap in cognitive skills, language competence, social competence, ability to build and maintain relationships or in the quality of the mother-child bond.” (Sandberg, 2013, pp. 135-136)
“children with involved and loving fathers have higher levels of psychological well-being and better cognitive abilities. When fathers provide even just routine child care, children have higher levels of educational and economic achievement and lower delinquency rates. Their children even tend to be more empathetic and socially competent. These findings hold true for children from all socioeconomic backgrounds, whether or not the mother is highly involved.” (Sandberg, 2013, p. 113)
Ultimately it should be up to each individual to decide if they want to leave the workforce to raise children or if they want to go after that next promotion (or both), but individuals should be informed about the financial implications of those decisions and the equation isn’t just about the present day cost of childcare.
I took some time to live my life
But don’t think I’m just his little wife
Don’t get it twisted, get it twisted
This my shit, bow down, bitches
*** This is a Security Bloggers Network syndicated blog from trustedsignal -- blog authored by davehull. Read the original post at: https://trustedsignal.blogspot.com/2024/03/whats-cause-of-problem-two.html