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Carnevale, Anthony P.; Desrochers, Donna M. – Professional School Counseling, 2003
Presents tips for school counselors in guiding students to good career choices and future workplace environments. Highlights the need for counselors to be constantly aware of trends in employment opportunities and provides advice on developing the skills and abilities that employers of the future might require from graduates and job applicants.…
Descriptors: Career Choice, Career Counseling, Counselor Role, Employment Patterns
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Mosca, Joseph B. – Public Personnel Management, 1997
Examines trends in voluntary and involuntary part-time employment, the disappearing "job," competitive international pressures, and new job skill requirements. (SK)
Descriptors: Employment Patterns, Job Skills, Labor Needs, Organizational Change
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Watts, A. G. – Journal of Employment Counseling, 2000
Article discusses the rationale for policy interest in career development services and how this is being strengthened by the current transformations in work and career climates. Explores the potential roles of public policy in relation to career development services. Discusses the range of policy issues related to making career development…
Descriptors: Career Development, Employment Patterns, Lifelong Learning, Organizational Change
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Paukert, Liba – International Labour Review, 1991
Analyzes the situation of women workers in Czechoslovakia in terms of working conditions, difference in earnings compared to men, and attitudes toward work. Future developments, including massive unemployment of women, are outlined. (SK)
Descriptors: Economic Change, Employed Women, Employment Patterns, Females
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Rubery, Jill; Grimshaw, Damian – International Labour Review, 2001
The impact of information and communications technologies on jobs is not yet known and no outcome is inevitable. Technology-driven changes in organizational structures, employment relations, worker autonomy, and work organization will not automatically result in higher job quality. (Contains 92 references.) (SK)
Descriptors: Employment Patterns, Foreign Countries, Information Technology, Job Skills
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Gagliani, Giorgio – American Journal of Sociology, 1981
This critique of the "orthodox radical" interpretation of social classes argues that the predominance of middle- class wage earners and women moving into the nonmanual job market constitutes a departure from the traditional "working class". Better working conditions and wages are the nonmanual workers' incentives to ally themselves with…
Descriptors: Career Education, Economic Research, Employment Patterns, Labor
Palmer, Scott – 1997
During the 20th century there has been a widespread pattern of language shift among the indigenous communities of the United States and Canada. The language-of-work hypothesis posits that if the national language is used as the language of work for virtually all jobs in a minority-language community, the national language will, within a few…
Descriptors: Acculturation, American Indian Languages, Attitude Change, Economic Factors
Meier-Kronick, Nancy – 1993
This paper reviews variables specific to the Mexican-American culture that might influence work-related behavior and outcomes for youths with disabilities from this population. Areas covered include: parental/family network; cultural view of disability; religious influences; acculturation levels; language issues; education and employment…
Descriptors: Change Strategies, Cultural Differences, Cultural Influences, Disabilities
Heinrich, Janet – 2001
Current evidence suggests emerging shortages of nurses available or willing to fill some vacant positions in hospitals, nursing homes, and home care. The nationwide unemployment rate for registered nurses (RNs), which has been low for many years, has declined to 1.0 percent, the lowest level in more than a decade. Nurses report job dissatisfaction…
Descriptors: Career Education, Data Collection, Employee Attitudes, Employer Employee Relationship
Women's Bureau (DOL), Washington, DC. – 2000
To benefit from new millennium opportunities, women should take advantage of the burgeoning information technology revolution and growth in other mathematics- and science-based occupations. Among occupations, professional jobs will increase the fastest and add the most employment. Among industries, the computer and data processing services…
Descriptors: Administrators, Adult Education, Demand Occupations, Employed Women
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Wigand, Rolf T. – Information Services and Use, 1985
Reviews the work environments surrounding integrated office systems, and synthesizes the known effects of automated office technologies with regard to their impact on information networks, work flow/processes, and organizational structure and power. (CLB)
Descriptors: Access to Information, Automation, Employment Patterns, Information Networks
Houseman, Susan N. – 2001
Workers in flexible staffing arrangementsincluding temporary agency, direct-hire temporary, on-call, and contract workersare much less likely than regular, direct-hire employees to be covered by laws mandating or regulating workplace benefits. They are also much less likely to receive pension, health insurance, and other benefits on the job.…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Employer Employee Relationship, Employment Patterns, Employment Practices
Long, Michael; Fischer, John – 2002
Leading-edge firms (LEFs)--at the forefront of their industry in terms of growth or market share--may influence skill development through diffusion of technology, products, or practices and use of market power to set standards or change customer businesses. Study of LEFs can identify the type and mix of skills needed in the industry. LEFs are…
Descriptors: Apprenticeships, Case Studies, Employer Attitudes, Employment Patterns
Seymour, Nicole – 2002
The trend of couples starting their own businesses and partnering in self-employment ventures has been dubbed "copreneurship." Copreneurship is the fastest-growing segment of family-based businesses. Husband-and-wife teams constitute the most visible and most researched category of copreneurs. According to a 1997 study, 30% of family…
Descriptors: Definitions, Dual Career Family, Employed Parents, Employment Patterns
Interstate Conference of Employment Security Agencies, Inc., Washington, DC. – 1991
Technological and demographic changes affect the nation's employment landscape. The most consistent trend of the century has been the shrinking workweek. By the year 2000, many workers will spend only 32 hours per week at work. Other workplace changes will continue the quest for more work satisfaction: technical trends (flextime/telecommuting);…
Descriptors: Automation, Employment Patterns, Fringe Benefits, Futures (of Society)
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