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A history of Take our Daughters to Work — and why it now includes sons

Now that women make up half the American workforce, is Take Our Daughters To Work Day still relevant?

President Barack Obama, daughters Malia (R) and Sasha sing 'Happy Birthday' to First Lady Michelle Obama as they arrive to take part in a community service project at Stuart Hobson Middle School in celebration of the Martin Luther King, Jr. day of service in Washington, DC, on January 17, 2011.
President Barack Obama, daughters Malia (R) and Sasha sing 'Happy Birthday' to First Lady Michelle Obama as they arrive to take part in a community service project at Stuart Hobson Middle School in celebration of the Martin Luther King, Jr. day of service in Washington, DC, on January 17, 2011.
JEWEL SAMAD/AFP/Getty Images

Today is Take Our Daughters and Sons to Work Day, when parents host their kids at the office to expand their career horizons. Originally called Take Our Daughters to Work Day, the event was founded in 1993 by Gloria Steinem and the Ms. Foundation for Women.

“The effects were explosive,” recalls Marie Wilson, who was president of the Ms. Foundation at the time. “First of all, the visibility of girls in the workplace showed up the invisibility of adult women.”

Wilson says countless women have told her that going to work with a parent or other adult shaped their careers. Still, many critics say girls no longer need to be singled out. After all, women now make up half the American workforce.

“It’s becoming a little archaic,” says Susan Heathfield, a human resources expert. “My personal preference would be Take Your Child to Work Day.”

In fact, the day’s official title was changed in 2003 to Take Our Daughters and Sons to Work Day. Still, Ms. Foundation’s Wilson thinks a day that focuses on women’s role in the workplace is still relevant.

“Women are still far behind in leadership in every area,” she says, pointing out that American women hold fewer than 20 percent of leadership jobs and make about 77 cents for every dollar a man makes.                  

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