Allison J. Morgan
Pennsylvania State University
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acm sigcpr sigmis conference on computer personnel research | 2004
Eileen M. Trauth; Jeria L. Quesenberry; Allison J. Morgan
Among the research challenges in studying the under representation of women in the IT field is that of developing appropriate theory to provide a basis for understanding and explanation about this gender imbalance. At present, there are two dominant theories in the gender literature that are used to explain the participation of women in the IT profession. The essentialist perspective dichotomizes gender based upon the presumption of significant inherent differences between women and men. This view finds the causes of gender under representation in biology. The social construction perspective focuses on the social construction of IT as a male domain, which is interpreted as incompatible with the social construction of female identity. This view finds the causes of gender under representation in the IT sector. The research discussed in this paper is directed at the development of a new theory that focuses on individual differences among women as they relate to the needs and characteristics of IT work and the IT workplace. This view finds the causes of gender under representation in the socio-cultural environment that shapes each womans gender identity and her professional development, and her individual responses to these influences.
Information Resources Management Journal | 2006
Jeria L. Quesenberry; Eileen M. Trauth; Allison J. Morgan
Despite the recent growth in the number of women in the American labor force, women are still under-represented in the IT workforce. Key among the factors that account for this under-representation is balancing work-family issues. This article presents a framework for analyzing work-family balance from a field study of women employed in the American IT workforce. The findings are examined through the lens of the Individual Differences Theory of Gender and IT to show the range of ways in which work-family considerations influence womens IT career decisions. The framework is used to support the theoretical argument that women exhibit a range of decisions regarding career and parenthood: the non-parent, the working parent, the back-on-track parent, and the off-the-track parent. These findings illustrate an identifiable theme that crosses geographical regions and timeframes; societal messages are complex and difficult to digest and are processed in different ways by different women, yet they contribute to the decisions women make about their professional and personal lives.
americas conference on information systems | 2004
Allison J. Morgan; Jeria L. Quesenberry; Eileen M. Trauth
Archive | 2008
Eileen M. Trauth; Allison J. Morgan
Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology | 2003
Allison J. Morgan; Cong Chen
Archive | 2006
Allison J. Morgan; Eileen M. Trauth
americas conference on information systems | 2011
Tonjia S. Coverdale; Allison J. Morgan
Archive | 2008
Allison J. Morgan; Eileen M. Trauth
americas conference on information systems | 2006
Allison J. Morgan
americas conference on information systems | 2005
Allison J. Morgan; Bernard J. Jansen; Eileen M. Trauth