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Aley, James – Fortune, 1995
A look at employment gain or loss and job creation figures indicates that the more skilled, educated workers an industry has, the greater the chance that it is creating high quality jobs. Top job-creating industries include health care, motion pictures, and computers. (JOW)
Descriptors: Computers, Employment Projections, Films, Health Personnel
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Smyer, Michael; And Others – Gerontologist, 1992
Short-term longitudinal study assessed single and combined effects of two interventions designed to affect nursing assistants' (n=193) performance by increasing knowledge and motivation. Four sites included skills training only, job redesign only, both interventions, and control. Significant differences were found in knowledge in comparisons…
Descriptors: Job Development, Job Performance, Job Training, Nurses Aides
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Castells, Manuel; Aoyama, Yuko – International Labour Review, 1994
Analysis of occupational structures in Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States shows divergent paths toward postindustrial society, with different forms of knowledge-based production (service-economy and info-industrial) that reflect cultural and institutional diversity. (SK)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Developing Nations, Economic Change, Employment Patterns
Eleey, Michael – Cause/Effect, 1999
Recommends a systems approach to ensure a positive working environment for campus information technology professionals to help reduce personnel turnover in this critical area. Guidelines include appropriate compensation, reasonable and effective matching of job scope and resources, problem prevention, and balanced professional development. (DB)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Information Technology, Job Development, Personnel Management
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Britton, Andrew – International Labour Review, 1997
Argues that full employment must be acceptable on both social and economic grounds. Examines profound changes in industrialized economies since the 1970s and the diversity of employment contracts. Suggests that difficult policy decisions surround full employment. (SK)
Descriptors: Developed Nations, Employment, Industrialization, Job Development
Cappelli, Peter – Harvard Business Review, 2000
Employee retention must be rethought in a free-agent market. Compensation can shape who leaves and stays. Job design and customization can tailor jobs to employee needs. Encouraging social ties among colleagues and selecting appealing locations for workplaces are other ways to retain talented workers. (SK)
Descriptors: Compensation (Remuneration), Employer Employee Relationship, Job Development, Labor Turnover
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
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
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
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Stockdale, Aileen – Journal of Rural Studies, 2006
Migration from and to depopulating areas is related to the prospects for rural economic regeneration. The focus is on whether or not migration processes give rise to the necessary human capital required for successful endogenous development. Data from Scottish case studies pertaining to in-, out- and return migrants are analysed. Only by leaving…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Migration, Rural Economics, Rural Areas
Campion, Michael A.; Thayer, Paul W. – 1990
A literature review and two major studies discovered four approaches to job design, each geared toward different sets of outcomes for individual employees and organizations. The motivational approach tries to design jobs to provide the worker with autonomy and the opportunity to make decisions about how or in what order tasks are done. The…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Employment Problems, Human Factors Engineering, Job Analysis
Manpower, 1975
Descriptors: Employment Opportunities, Federal Aid, Federal Legislation, Job Development
General Accounting Office, Washington, DC. Div. of Human Resources. – 1986
Between July 1981 and November 1982, the United States experienced the worst economic recession of the post-World War II period. In response, Congress in March 1983 enacted the Emergency Jobs Appropriations Act, whose objectives were: (1) to provide productive employment for jobless Americans; (2) to hasten or initiate federal projects and…
Descriptors: Employment, Employment Opportunities, Employment Programs, Federal Government
Bluestone, Barry; Harrison, Bennett – 1986
For more than a decade, the United States has produced more new jobs than most other industrialized nations--nearly 20 million new jobs during 1973-1984. However, none of the aggregate numbers reveals anything about the types of jobs created or how much they pay. The following facts are pertinent: (1) compared to the period 1973-1979, the net new…
Descriptors: Adults, Employment Patterns, Employment Projections, Job Development
Quick, Polly McW. – 1982
The position of the anthropologist working in North America with Native Americans today differs from that of most anthropologists working with Native Americans a few decades ago, regardless of the topic of study. This affects the kind of anthropological research undertaken, the way in which the work is done, and the results. These consequences, in…
Descriptors: American Indians, Anthropology, Attitude Change, Federal Legislation
Munson, Paul J.; And Others – 1975
A 20-month old faculty development program at a large urban university, Virginia Commonwealth University, is examined by discussing the strategies employed to facilitate faculty growth, and analyze, in hindsight, how appropriate or inappropriate they may have been in view of faculty or institutional needs. Virginia Commonwealth University's…
Descriptors: Faculty, Higher Education, Job Development, Medical Education
Ferman, Louis A. – 1967
Operation Retrieval is a research project designed by the Department of Labor to review and assess the experiences of 55 experimental and demonstration projects for disadvantaged youth conducted during the period 1963-65, and to assess the impact of strategies in job placement, job creation, and job development. Job placement and development units…
Descriptors: Disadvantaged Youth, Evaluation, Guidelines, Job Development
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