Images (5)
दस्तावेज़
| id |
id
621029222
|
|---|---|
| contentType |
contentType
document
|
| source |
source
import
|
Source image fields (6)
Extracted text
OCR Page 1 of 55-
ten 1 Neera - -
Families and Work Institute
for ymr bookshelves
(Igottro) i
MEMORANDUM
Niche
TO:
Friends of the Families and Work Institute
FROM:
Ellen Galinsky
RE:
The National Study of the Changing Workforce
DATE:
July 31, 1998
We are very excited about our latest research project, The National Study of the Changing
Workforce, and we hope that you have seen or heard some of the extensive media
coverage the report has received since its release. As a friend of the Families and Work
Institute (FWI), we wanted to share a copy of the publication, a sampling of the press
coverage and an order form with you.
The National Study of the Changing Workforce is a nationally representative study of the
U.S. labor force, funded by fifteen sponsors who helped guide its progress. This study
also provides a historical perspective by comparing data with FWI's 1992 National Study
and the Department of Labor's 1977 Quality of Employment Survey. We believe that we
have a groundbreaking story to tell about the attitudes and lives of American workers
today. The report provides a model for understanding how work, family, and personal life
fit together, a model that incorporates outcomes important to all---productivity and well-
being.
There has been enormous public and media attention for the report. The
comprehensiveness of the study provided many different angles for journalists. All the
major newspapers in the country picked up the findings: The New York Times spurred a
heated debate about the roles of working fathers; The Washington Post and The Wall
Street Journal both featured articles on work problems created by the growing demands
of work-life; The Chicago Tribune, The Boston Globe, and The Miami Herald echoed the
theme of balancing work and home. The television news coverage was also extensive:
Good Morning America, CBS This Morning, the CBS Evening News, CNN, and others
covered many issues from job stress to the public perception of working mothers. Radio
segments such as a call-in show on NPR were also proof that we have struck a resonant
chord for today's workers.
330 Seventh Avenue, New York, New York 10001 (212) 465.2044 Fax (212) 465.8637
Relations
belongs_to