• More News
Stock Indexes Drift Lower as Europe Fears Loom
Stock Drift Lower as Europe Fears Loom

The Dow Jones industrial average and other stock indexes …

US 30-Year Mortgage Rate Falls to Record 3.78 Pct.
30-Year Mortgage Rate Falls to 3.78 Pct

The average U.S. rate for the 30-year fixed mortgage fell to a …

Weekly Jobless Claims Little Changed

The number of people seeking unemployment aid changed little last week, signaling modest …

BlackBerry's Longtime Head of Sales Resigns
Longtime BlackBerry Exec Leaves Firm

Longtime Research In Motion (RIM) executive Patrick Spence is …

Report: NYSE Reaches Out to Facebook
Report: NYSE Reaches Out to Facebook

NYSE Euronext has reached out to Facebook Inc., inviting the …

Facebook Stock Climbs, but Company Faces Lawsuits
Facebook Stock Climbs Amid Lawsuits

Facebook's fourth day of trading as public company brought …

Hewlett-Packard to Lay Off 27,000 Employees as 2Q Profit Falls 31 Percent
Hewlett-Packard to Cut 8% of Workforce

Hewlett-Packard Co. is cutting 27,000 jobs in an effort to …

US Stocks Recover to End Mostly Ahead
US Stocks Recover to End Mostly Ahead

US stocks recovered to end mostly higher on Wednesday after a …

Between Facebook and JPMorgan, Wall St. Woes Mount
Facebook, JPMorgan Cause Unease

Investor anger mounted Wednesday over the initial public …

Sony, Samsung Rein in TV Price Wars
Sony, Samsung Rein in TV Price Wars

Sony and Samsung Electronics are trying to force retailers to …

  • Marketplace Advertisement

Women Outpacing Men in College Degrees

Updated: Thursday, 10 Feb 2011, 1:00 PM PST
Published : Thursday, 10 Feb 2011, 1:00 PM PST

(NewsCore) - US women are nearly twice as likely as US men to earn a bachelor's degree by the time they are 23, according to a Bureau of Labor Statistics report released Thursday, Bloomberg News reported.

According to the report, nearly one in four women had finished a four-year degree by that age compared with only one in seven men. The new information was culled from a study that follows the lives of the same 9,000 people, all born between 1980 and 1984.

More women are entering college, a bureau economist explained to Bloomberg News, in response to growing opportunities in the workplace caused by a shift from manufacturing to a service economy.

"Now that there are more opportunities for women to work, we're seeing a growing number completing high school and college and going on to graduate and professional programs," economist Jay Meisenheimer told Bloomberg.

It is the first time that particular survey had a large enough sample to make a meaningful comparison between men and women finishing college degrees, Meisenheimer said.

Read more: Bloomberg News

 

blog comments powered by Disqus

  • Marketplace Advertisement
  • Related Keywords
  • Related Keyword Searches

      

Bookmark / Share Bookmark / Share
 

 

Advertisement
Advertisement
  • Most Read Stories | myFOXla.com