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Group & Organization Management
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Individual Task Choice and the Division of Challenging Tasks Between Men and Women

Irene E. De Pater

University of Amsterdam

Annelies E. M. Van Vianen

University of Amsterdam

Ronald H. Humphrey

Virginia Commonwealth University

Randall G. Sleeth

Virginia Commonwealth University

Nathan S. Hartman

John Carroll University

Agneta H. Fischer

University of Amsterdam

Challenging experiences are considered important for career development, and previous studies have suggested that women have fewer o f those experiences in their jobs than men have. However, the nature and possible determinants of this gender gap in job challenge have hardly been empirically studied. In the present study, the authors examine (a) gender differences in individuals’ choice to perform challenging tasks and (b) gender differences in the allocation of challenging tasks in opposite-sex dyads. Results show that the men and women in the sample did not differ in their individual choice to perform challenging tasks, but after task allocation in opposite-sex dyads men ended up with more of the challenging tasks, whereas women ended up with more of the nonchallenging tasks. The authors discuss the possible consequences of these results for women’s career development.

Key Words: challenging experiences • career development • gender differences • task division

This version was published on October 1, 2009

Group & Organization Management, Vol. 34, No. 5, 563-589 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/1059601108331240


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