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Martel, Jennifer L.; Kelter, Laura A. – Monthly Labor Review, 2000
In 1999 unemployment reached a 30-year low; more than half of all job growth was in services; federal employment increased because of Census 2000; the home health care industry began a slight recovery. Nearly half of total employment growth was in high-paying managerial and professional specialties, especially for women and blacks. (SK)
Descriptors: Demand Occupations, Economic Factors, Employment Patterns, Labor Market
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Hecker, Daniel E. – Monthly Labor Review, 2001
Electronic business is stimulating employment in some sectors across industries, such as computer-related and customer service occupations, and diminishing employment in others, such as administrative support and marketing/sales. Similarly, employment impacts will vary by industry. (Contains 56 notes and references.) (SK)
Descriptors: Computer Mediated Communication, Demand Occupations, Employment Projections, Employment Qualifications
Career Voyages, 2006
The gateway to a successful future is not so much knowing your intended career path today but in keeping an open and curious mind about the information you are learning now in your classes and how it relates to potential career opportunities for the future--whether entering the work force after high school, college or advanced studies. This issue…
Descriptors: Demand Occupations, Science Process Skills, Mathematics Skills, Industry
Jackson, Terrence; Ginther, Steve – Occupational Outlook Quarterly, 1974
Credit is plentiful and so are bad debts. There is a good demand for bill collectors. Where they work, job qualifications, employment outlook, earnings and other aspects of the occupation are topics considered. (MW)
Descriptors: Credit (Finance), Demand Occupations, Employment Opportunities, Finance Occupations
Nardone, Tom – Occupational Outlook Quarterly, 1984
Examines how authors have looked at the future and probes the limits of forecasting. Looks at several futurists' views on the manufacturing industry and emerging occupations. (SK)
Descriptors: Demand Occupations, Emerging Occupations, Employment Projections, Futures (of Society)
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Cotter, David A.; And Others – Work and Occupations: An International Sociological Journal, 1995
Analysis of 1980 and 1990 Public Use Microdata Samples showed that, among full-time workers, occupational sex segregation declined 6.5 percentage points, less than the 8.5 point decline in the 1970s. Three-quarters of the desegregation was due to changed gender composition of occupations, one-quarter due to faster growth in more integrated…
Descriptors: Demand Occupations, Employment Patterns, Equal Opportunities (Jobs), Occupational Segregation
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Silvestri, George T. – Monthly Labor Review, 1995
Details employment by occupation in 1994 and projected for 2005. Suggests that the economy is expected to continue generating jobs for all levels of education and training, but growth will be greater for occupations requiring a bachelor's degree or more. (SK)
Descriptors: Demand Occupations, Educational Attainment, Employment Projections, Job Development
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Downes, Meredith; Kroeck, K. Galen – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 1996
Data on existing positions and on career interests in those occupations were compared separately for 656 working adults and 819 high school students; the adult sample was also analyzed by gender. An overall discrepancy appeared between positions and normative interests. Some categories had a high surplus of positions and low interest in them and…
Descriptors: Adults, Demand Occupations, Employment Statistics, High School Students
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Goodman, William – Monthly Labor Review, 1994
During business cycles, the distribution of jobs by sex and industry undergoes large shifts. These changes have a permanent effect on job distribution by sex. The shift to largely service occupations generally held by women and less demand for industries primarily staffed by men enabled women's employment growth to exceed that of men. (JOW)
Descriptors: Business Cycles, Demand Occupations, Employed Women, Employment Patterns
Occupational Outlook Quarterly, 2000
This issue on employment projections includes articles on the following: total employment in 1988, 1998, and projected for 2008; occupational groups projected to add the most jobs; industry groups projected to grow the fastest; projected changes in the major components of the gross domestic product; and projected growth and changing composition of…
Descriptors: Demand Occupations, Economic Change, Employment Projections, Employment Statistics
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Hecker, Daniel E. – Monthly Labor Review, 2001
Employment in professional and related occupations and service occupations will increase the fastest and add the most jobs from 2000 to 2010. Changes in technology or business operations will cause the largest declines in occupational demand. Occupations requiring a postsecondary award or academic degree will account for 42 percent of total job…
Descriptors: Demand Occupations, Employment Projections, Employment Qualifications, Job Development
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Guile, David – Journal of Education and Work, 2006
This paper challenges the prevailing conventional wisdom in the UK that the government is the sole architect of the education and training (E&T) system and that qualifications are the magic bullet for securing employment in the creative and cultural sector. It also argues that if policy-makers are serious about wanting to diversify the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Cultural Pluralism, Certification, Access to Education
Lowell, B. Lindsay; Salzman, Hal – Urban Institute (NJ1), 2007
Several high-level committees have concluded that current domestic and global trends are threatening America's global science and engineering (S&E) preeminence. Of the challenges discussed, few are thought to be as serious as the purported decline in the supply of high quality students from the beginning to the end of the S&E pipeline--a decline…
Descriptors: Engineering Education, Human Capital, Elementary Secondary Education, Labor Market
Collegiate Employment Research Institute (NJ3), 2008
This paper presents the recruiting trends for 2007-2008. This year's report is based on 994 respondents, including 84 K-12 school districts. The researchers focused attention on growing companies, based on lists from Forbes and Inc. magazines, and as a result, they have more small and medium-size employers represented this year. The sample…
Descriptors: College Seniors, School Districts, Majors (Students), Salaries
Houston, Paul D. – Phi Delta Kappan, 2006
The last few years have revealed a growing concern about U.S. global competitiveness, and American schools have been called to account for failing to produce enough engineers and math and science workers to compete in the new global economy. The author argues that the education solutions offered to tackle this problem are too simplistic. Instead…
Descriptors: Global Approach, Competition, Thinking Skills, Demand Occupations
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