Gender Wage Gap, Helen Foster Snow, Mariachi Math, Quichua
Top of Mind with Julie Rose - Season 1, Episode 219
- Jan 26, 2016 7:00 am
- 1:43:04 mins
Utah Gender Wage Gap (1:07) Guest: Susan Madsen, PhD, Utah Valley University’s Woodbury Professor of Leadership and Ethics Here in the US, women hold half the jobs, but make just 78 cents for every dollar a man earns on average. It’d be easy to assume the problem is primarily among uneducated and part-time workers. But college data released by the US Department of Education last year found that’s not the case. There’s a large wage gap even between male and female graduates of elite universities. Ten years after starting college, men who graduate from MIT, Harvard and Stanford are earning at least 50 percent more than women who graduated from the same schools. Colleges with religious affiliation also tend to have large wage gaps between male and female graduates. And Brigham Young University has the highest of all the data compiled by the US Department of Education—10 years after enrolling at BYU, male graduates earn one and a half times more than female grads. Several other universities in Utah top the wage gap list for graduates. Mechanics of Porous, Brittle Material (27:48) Guest: Julio Valdes, PhD, Civil Engineering Professor at San Diego State University San Diego State University Civil Engineering Professor Julio Valdes has spent a lot of time in the physics lab listening to the crackle of puffed rice in order to learn more about what happens in avalanches and manufacturing processes where crunchy stuff gets smashed. The Apple Seed (41:35) Guest: Sam Payne From the Vaults: Helen Foster Snow (51:01) Guest: Sheril Foster Bischoff, Trustee of the Literary Collection of her Aunt, Helen Foster Snow News about China’s volatile economy, booming middle class and powerful government is easy to come by these days. But in the early 20th Century, news out of China was very rare. And, in the 1930s the news that the West received about China often came from an unlikely source – a dashing young American couple: Edgar Snow and his wife Helen Foster Snow. They crossed through dangerous military zones to cov