Since the dawn of time, or at least the dawn of the GPA, high school students have been hearing that
Since the dawn of time, or at least the dawn of the GPA, high school students have been hearing that grades matter. Now, a University of Miami study backs up that parental talking point: The better your GPA, the higher your income is likely to be 10 years after graduation. But as @think-progress points out, this doesn’t mean that girls with good grades earn more than boys with mediocre ones. Quite the contrary, in fact: A woman who got a 4.0 GPA in high school will only be worth about as much, income-wise, as a man who got a 2.0. A woman with a 2.0 average will make about as much as a man with a 0 GPA. Other depressing findings: Girls have significantly higher average GPAs, but “men will still end up having significantly higher income later on,” Think Progress says. And the GPA-gender wage gap continues through college and grad school: A woman who is one credential ahead of a man will always be worth less in terms of income: a woman with an associate’s degree makes less than a man with a vocational degree, a woman with a bachelor’s makes less than a man with an associate’s, and a woman with an advanced degree makes less than a man with a bachelor’s. Even among recent college graduates with the same grades, majors, and career fields, men will make more in their first jobs. (Chart via U of Miami) -- source link
#pay gap#gender gap#wage gap#sex discrimination#gender inequity#gender equity