Women began working in factories during World War II and continued to occupy the American work force after the war.
I believe it was from the Baby Boom the country's population grew dramatically -slim
The face of the American workforce changed in various ways. The type of people employed and the educational level of people employed changed too. Some nonwhites were able to keep some of their jobs in the manufacturing plants (well maybe not in the south) and more women joined the workforce (in new jobs and types of jobs). The returning GIs were able to take advantage of the GI bill benefits offering college educations or completions of educations. They were able to become more professional and technical. Unfortunately, not many nonwhite took advantage of this bill because the largest majority of them lived in the south or in the Southwest (such as Native Americans and Mexican Americans) and did not have access to the universities or enough education to enter college. As the decades passed the southern blacks were able to get the Civil Rights Act passed and endorsed by Lyndon Baines Johnson. The women began to flood the workforce and experienced unequal pay. The Equal Rights Amendment was never ratified so they still don't have equal pay for equal jobs. The Handicapped Acts also helped the disabled people to get better jobs and more access.
A factor that can not be changed in an experiment
It is still a factor.
variable
variable
No
The factor in an experiment that is changed on purpose is called the independent variable. This variable is manipulated by the researcher to observe its effect on the dependent variable. It is the cause being studied in the experiment.
Variable
variable
A variable.
the variable