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Showing 1 to 15 of 19 results Save | Export
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Leigh, J. Paul – Work and Occupations: An International Sociological Journal, 1982
With data from the Michigan Panel Study of Income Dynamics, this study investigates the direct and indirect effects of education on an individual's self-reported work hours lost due to illness. (Author/CT)
Descriptors: Education Work Relationship, Educational Status Comparison, Employment Level, Health Conditions
Gandy, Michael J. – Education of the Visually Handicapped, 1988
A survey of 109 visually impaired adults subsequent to their placement in competitive employment revealed that level of education, age, and race were strong determining factors in later financial success. Results suggest that visually impaired persons should extend educational experiences to increase potential earnings, age and race being…
Descriptors: Age Discrimination, Economic Status, Education Work Relationship, Educational Status Comparison
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Kraska, Marie F. – Journal of Studies in Technical Careers, 1991
As job skill levels increase, high school dropout has consequences for unemployment, the nation's economy, and the economic future of dropouts. More than ever, vocational education must investigate ways to tap the potential of dropout-prone students. (SK)
Descriptors: Dropouts, Economic Impact, Education Work Relationship, Educational Status Comparison
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Klerman, Jacob Alex; Karoly, Lynn A. – Monthly Labor Review, 1994
Reassessment of National Longitudinal Survey of Youth data showed that median male high school graduates do not immediately enter long-term jobs but secure employment of at least 2 or 3 years' duration in their early 20s. Those at the 75th percentile and high school dropouts take longer to achieve stable employment. (SK)
Descriptors: Education Work Relationship, Educational Status Comparison, Employment Level, High School Graduates
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Tinto, Vincent – Higher Education, 1981
Employing the bilateral or segmented theory of labor markets, research has begun to reveal the complexity and variability of schooling's impact on diverse work careers of differing groups in society. Specific attention is paid to the effect of educational origins on the careers of individuals in professional occupations. (Author/MLW)
Descriptors: College Role, Education Work Relationship, Educational Status Comparison, Employment Level
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Bills, David B. – Review of Educational Research, 2003
The empirical relationship between educational attainment and credentials with socioeconomic attainment is well established, but why this relationship arises remains in doubt. The author of this article discusses seven types of middle-range theories meant to explain the relationship: human capital, screening (including filtering), signaling,…
Descriptors: Job Applicants, Credentials, Human Capital, Employment Level
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Hollingsworth, Michael; Markham, Anthony – Bioscience Education e-Journal, 2006
A survey was conducted in UK Universities to identify the employment of pharmacology graduates (BSc, MSc and PhD) 6 months after graduation in 2003. The aim was to provide data for the British Pharmacological Society (BPS) so they could offer advice to interested bodies and to University staff for careers information. 85% of 52 Universities…
Descriptors: Employment Level, Pharmacology, Graduate Surveys, Employment Opportunities
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Rytina, Steven – Social Forces, 2000
Trends in occupational mobility for U.S. males, 1972-90, were analyzed using three occupational scales providing different indicators of occupational status and social stratification. Results indicate stable or increasing rigidity in U.S. occupational stratification, with a decline in education's importance, both as key to achieving high rank and…
Descriptors: Advantaged, Education Work Relationship, Educational Status Comparison, Employment Level
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Hogan, Dennis P.; Pazul, Michele – American Journal of Sociology, 1982
Tests the hypothesis that southern-born Black men who were educated in the South and migrated to the North earn less and have lower prestige jobs than southern-born Blacks who migrated North as children, or northern-born Blacks with equivalent levels of education. Findings support the hypothesis. (Author/AM)
Descriptors: Black Employment, Blacks, Careers, Differences
Sicherman, Nachum – 1989
Reasons for occupational mobility are imperfect occupational matching, search, exogenous changes in the market or in the person, and movement along a career path. A positive or negative relationship between the level of schooling and occupational mobility depends on the type of mobility involved. Higher levels of schooling lead to careers…
Descriptors: Adults, Career Change, Career Education, Education Work Relationship
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Trusheim, Dale; Crouse, James – Research in Higher Education, 1981
The assessment of the effects of college social prestige and college selectivity on men's occupational status and income based on a national sample of men from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics is discussed. College selectivity has a significant impact on middle-aged men's income in a single year. (Author/MLW)
Descriptors: College Graduates, College Role, Education Work Relationship, Educational Status Comparison
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Raffe, David – Oxford Review of Education, 1981
Presents sociological perspectives on the relationship of education to employment. Specifically examined are the relationship of educational qualifications to occupational status, education's effect on worker productivity, and the schools' role in creating desirable employees. The discussion incorporates data from the Youth Opportunities Programme…
Descriptors: Comparative Education, Dropout Programs, Education Work Relationship, Educational Status Comparison
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Stewart, Kenneth L.; De Leon, Arnoldo – Aztlan: A Journal of Chicano Studies, 1985
Examines patterns of school attendance, adult literacy, and occupational status among U.S.-born Mexican Americans, Mexican immigrants, and Anglos in south, central, and west Texas regions, 1850-1900. Concludes that education and literacy produced occupational advantages only for Anglos. (SV)
Descriptors: Adult Literacy, Anglo Americans, Attendance Patterns, Comparative Analysis
Garcia, Steve B. – 1981
The implications of an ethnicity variable, language usage patterns, on the status attainment of 1,777 Mexican American males, ages 18 to 64 years, in the civilian labor force were studied. Language was viewed as a background variable that influences the relative positioning of Chicanos in the stratification system. It was hypothesized that, in…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Bilingualism, Economic Opportunities, Education Work Relationship
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Cohen, Yinon – International Migration Review, 1989
Compares Israeli-born Americans, including Arabs, to both United States and Israeli populations with respect to demographic and socioeconomic characteristics. While Israeli immigrants in the United States experienced greater economic success and lower unemployment than the Israeli labor force, research reveals occupational and economic…
Descriptors: Arabs, Census Figures, Comparative Analysis, Cross Cultural Studies
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