From Wikipedia:
In economics, the term glass ceiling refers to situations where the advancement of a qualified person within the hierarchy of an organization is stopped at a lower level because of some form of discrimination, most commonly sexism or racism. However, since the term was coined, "glass ceiling" has also come to describe the limited advancement of the deaf, gays and lesbians, blind, disabled, and aged.
Women (APEX)
glass ceiling
the glass ceiling
The term "glass ceiling" was thought to first used to refer to invisible barriers that impede the career advancement of women in an article by Carol Hymowitz and Timothy Schellhardt in the March 24, 1986 edition of the Wall Street Journal.
Glass ceiling.
The phrase The Glass Ceiling is best described as when the advancement of a person in an organization stops due to discrimination or politics.
Vault ,or curved ceiling
In economics, the glass ceiling suggests that there is a limit to how far you can go on the corporate latter. For instance, there is a good chance that an individual that has just started working for a company may not receive the role of a manager until they've been with the company for quite some time.
The cast of Through the Glass Ceiling - 1995 includes: Molly Orr as Alice Lacey
The phrase The Glass Ceiling is best described as when the advancement of a person in an organization stops due to discrimination or politics.
The cast of Glass Ceiling - 2014 includes: Gemma Doorly as Samantha Patrick Joseph Byrnes as Mason
The correct term is false ceiling. Fall ceiling isn't correct.