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很想知道为什么这么多女性去读MBA?mba申请人访谈一大半是女的啊

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81#
发表于 2010-9-3 17:33:30 | 只看该作者
文革唯一的好处,如果有,就是极大的提高了中国的妇女地位。转一篇文章吧。

http://www.newsweek.com/2010/08/27/chinese-women-are-more-ambitious-than-americans.print.html
The Women Who Want to Run the World
by R. M. Schneiderman and Alexandra A. SenoAugust 27, 2010
 Ryan Pyle / Corbis
Workers at the Shanghai offices of Gentech.

To understand the changing role of women in China, consider the runaway success of a novel titled Du Lala’s Rise. The story chronicles the adventures of the fictional Miss Du as she moves up the corporate ladder. The book spent 141 weeks on the Chinese bestseller list and spawned two sequels, one of this year’s top films at the box office, and an online drama series that has had more than 100 million page views since starting in mid-August. One fan, Liu Danhui, a 28-year-old with a marketing job at a foreign company, says she admires Du’s persistence and believes that “there will be more and more women like her in China in the future.” In fact, there are so many people like Liu that Du Lala’s Rise has left in its wake a thriving subgenre of Du-inspired literature portraying the aspirations and dilemmas of the country’s ambitious young urbanites.

Decades after Mao Zedong declared that “women hold up half the sky,” the success of Du Lala and her peers reflects a curious fact about women in China: they appear to be far more ambitious than their counterparts in the United States. According to a study completed earlier this year by the New York–based Center for Work-Life Policy, just over one third of all college-educated American women describe themselves as very ambitious. In China that figure is closer to two thirds. What’s more, over 75 percent of women in China aspire to hold a top corporate job, compared with just over half in the U.S., and 77 percent of Chinese women participate in the workforce, compared with 69 percent in the U.S.

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One reason for this is that China is changing at such a blistering speed that new opportunities are becoming available to skilled workers of both genders. Ripa Rashid, a senior vice president at the Center for Work-Life Policy, says the rapid growth “creates this excitement,” and builds on a cultural and historical legacy in which Chinese women are not just encouraged to participate in the workforce, they are expected to. When the authors of the Work-Life study conducted focus groups, one of the things they frequently heard was that communism “always emphasized that women can do whatever men can do.” Indeed, for decades in China, the communist government has provided equal access to education. “Mao’s revolution inflicted enormous pain upon society,” says Isobel Coleman, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations. “But it did empower women.”

One result has been a generation of women and girls who believe they belong among China’s power elite. In the U.S., that shift followed decades of pitched battles over equality and women’s rights. It was considered a big deal, for instance, when Madeleine Albright became the first female secretary of state in 1990s. Likewise, Nancy Pelosi’s rise to become the speaker of the House was seen as monumental. In China, though, there are fewer institutional barriers for women trying to succeed professionally, says Judi Kilachand, an executive director at the Asia Society, which organized a conference on women in leadership in Hong Kong in June. Female leaders are therefore viewed as more common. One of the most familiar public figures responsible for the country’s economic openness is the now retired vice premier Wu Yi, who trained as a petroleum engineer before a career in government that included negotiating World Trade Organization admission for China. Today China has a greater percentage of women in its Parliament—21.3 percent—than the U.S. does in Congress.

That’s true, too, in the executive suite. Grant Thornton International, the tax consultancy, found that roughly eight out of 10 companies in China had wom-en in senior management roles, compared with approximately half in the European Union and two thirds in the U.S. Similarly, in China, 31 percent of top executives are female, compared with 20 percent in America. One of the most visible real-estate tycoons is Zhang Xin, who along with her husband controls the Sohu property empire. Tellingly, half of the 14 female billionaires on Forbes’s 2010 list of the world’s wealthiest people were from mainland China. So now, as cities throughout the country sprout new skyscrapers and roads clog up with luxury cars, it’s relatively easy for women to envision themselves as a key part of that picture of prosperity.

Part of the difference may also be that women in the U.S. are often stigmatized if they express considerable ambition. Because they have already achieved a certain level of equality and material success, the assumption, many say, is that women should sacrifice only so much in pursuit of their careers. When Hillary Clinton ran for president, for example, she was labeled by some as overly zealous to take the White House. “A lot of women in the U.S. are incredibly ambitious, but they are too embarrassed to admit it,” says Rosalind Hudnell, the head of diversity and inclusion at Intel Corp.

Another factor: women in China are aided in the pursuit of their careers by the fact that child care is easily accessible. In the U.S., as in much of the Western world, many women live far from parents and siblings, and feel enormous anxiety about working while sending children to day care. In many instances, educated mothers stay home or step off the corporate ladder to take care of their children. Not so in China. Collective and state-run day-care centers are located near workplaces, and the emphasis is on working to provide a good life for one’s child, or on what the Work-Life Center’s Rashid calls the “pragmatic aspects” of child care, versus the emotional response to allowing someone else to take care of one’s children.

On top of all that, ambition has become a critical survival skill in navigating the opportunities and challenges of living in a society that is growing and changing faster than perhaps any other country. Younger Chinese women are feeling the pressure to “make it”—not necessarily just by the measures of a man’s world, but to keep up in an environment where housing prices in major cities have doubled every few years and where competition for everything is rife. In other words, in this fast-paced world, ambition is seen as a matter of necessity. And those who don’t have it, the thinking goes, may ultimately get left behind.

With Isaac Stone Fish in Beijing
82#
发表于 2010-9-3 20:10:16 | 只看该作者
大家讨论的都很好。我发现发言的女性,可以分为两种。
一种是有较强女权主义思想的,以女性被低看为耻。真心真意的讨厌呆在家里做家庭主妇。
另一种则是“无可奈何”变得坚强的。感觉累,也想轻松些,去“女主外,男主内”。但是社会与现实都不允许。
正因为这种差别的存在,以“中国女性”这么大的字眼来涵盖所有的人,难免有所偏颇,引起争议了。
-- by 会员 summit (2010/9/3 17:06:36)



这种两分法才是偏颇吧。我自己并不属于其中任何一类。生活往往都是复杂的。每个人在不同的阶段,要考虑和衡量的各种因素非常不同。其实都是个案,我一直觉得,没有必要问别人为什么做一件事情或者不做一件事情,只需要想好自己在每个阶段做什么和不做什么就够了。
83#
发表于 2010-9-3 20:58:23 | 只看该作者
大家讨论的都很好。我发现发言的女性,可以分为两种。
一种是有较强女权主义思想的,以女性被低看为耻。真心真意的讨厌呆在家里做家庭主妇。
另一种则是“无可奈何”变得坚强的。感觉累,也想轻松些,去“女主外,男主内”。但是社会与现实都不允许。
正因为这种差别的存在,以“中国女性”这么大的字眼来涵盖所有的人,难免有所偏颇,引起争议了。
-- by 会员 summit (2010/9/3 17:06:36)




这种两分法才是偏颇吧。我自己并不属于其中任何一类。生活往往都是复杂的。每个人在不同的阶段,要考虑和衡量的各种因素非常不同。其实都是个案,我一直觉得,没有必要问别人为什么做一件事情或者不做一件事情,只需要想好自己在每个阶段做什么和不做什么就够了。
-- by 会员 ziye210 (2010/9/3 20:10:16)


跟ZIYE210姐姐的贴. 我就是乐于在家带小孩子的男生.
84#
发表于 2010-11-2 00:36:57 | 只看该作者
对于中国人去美国读MBA女多男少的问题,我是这么看的:实话实说(无意冒犯女性)

女性在中国的环境下不易获得成功:女性玩不明白中国的政治和官僚体系,同时创业能力有限

女性更崇尚物质生活,MBA在读期间和以后的预期都代表了一种西方式的,国际化的生活方式

女性更适合读书:MBA再怎么宣扬管理,创业,其实就其本身而言还是一种考试/读书的过程
-- by 会员 usocean (2010/1/5 13:51:32)



很中肯
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