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Because the men were all in the army fighting and women had to step in to do what the men were doing.
With the men fighting in the war, women took the jobs that men had been doing before the war.
The kind of jobs that women had before the Great Depression were limited to household chores. After the Great Depression, they were forced to find jobs that would generate income.
propaganda was created that then (as opposed to the propaganda recruitment campaigns during the war) told women to go back to doing housework, and having families as a main occupation.
It Affected men and women , even children ways of doing things .
Barbara Ellen Summerville has written: 'Career orientation of Washington community college women' -- subject(s): Municipal universities and colleges, Occupational training 'The direction of motivation in women' -- subject(s): Achievement motivation, Women
it made it easier for the other team to know what there doing
Women in ww2 had the job of doing the men who had gone to war's jobs. If women were pregnant they would be evacuated with other children.
Football, rugby, doing their duty to protect, women. They enjoyed nothing better than to show of their women to other men.
No I didn't, but it does depend on what they both are doing and who is judging .Some things men are better at than a woman, but there are other's women does well.
Nancy Lynn Stevens has written: 'The investigation of anxiety, motivation, and flow experience in competitive sport' -- subject(s): Anxiety, Competition (Psychology), Field hockey, Motivation (Psychology), Psychological aspects, Psychological aspects of Field hockey, Psychological aspects of Sports for women, Psychology, Sports for women, Women athletes, Women college students
None that they haven't faced any other time in history. For any entrepreneur to succeed, male or female they must choose a business they have a passion for. They must have the motivation to get up every morning and love what they are doing, be excited each and every day. Then and only then will they succeed never letting any roadblocks get in their way.
Katie Morrison. Rin Allen was the stunt double doing the other side of the fencing.
JoAnne Graf has written: 'Q-sort study of the motivation of female collegiate coaches' -- subject(s): Psychology, Motivation (Psychology), Women college teachers, Coaches (Athletics)
Chris Voelz has written: 'Motivation in coaching a team sport' -- subject(s): Achievement motivation, Coaching (Athletics), Psychological aspects, Psychological aspects of Sports, Sports, Sports for women
Women with a love of competitive sports watch football, basketball, baseball, and any other competition. Not to say they don't have favorites but the competition is my motivation for watching. I do profess that I'd rank my favorites as Football, Baseball, Basketball, Hockey, Soccer....etc...
Linda Babcock has written: 'Ask for it' -- subject(s): Negotiation, Assertiveness in women, Achievement motivation in women, Negotiation in business, Life skills guides, Women, OverDrive, Business, Nonfiction