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Basta, Nicholas – Graduating Engineer, 1985
Coming from a variety of disciplines, manufacturing engineers are keys to industry's efforts to modernize, with demand exceeding supply. The newest and fastest-growing areas include machine vision, composite materials, and manufacturing automation protocols, each of which is briefly discussed. (JN)
Descriptors: Employment, Employment Opportunities, Employment Patterns, Engineering
Basta, Nicholas – Graduating Engineer, 1985
As the debate over nuclear safety continues, the job market remains healthy for nuclear engineers. The average salary offered to new nuclear engineers with bachelor's degrees is $27,400. Salary averages and increases compare favorably with other engineering disciplines. Various job sources in the field are noted. (JN)
Descriptors: Employment Opportunities, Employment Patterns, Engineering, Engineering Education
Peer reviewedStewman, Shelby – Administrative Science Quarterly, 1986
The scope of organizational demography is expanded to include two populations, the population of workers and the population of jobs. White's (1970) vacancy chain model is extended, including development of chain reactions of vacancies by person moves (promotions, hires). Multiple grade ratios indicate relative career chances over the…
Descriptors: Employment Patterns, Job Analysis, Labor Turnover, Models
Choate, Pat; Linger, J. K. – Vocational Education Journal, 1986
The authors discuss current trends in technology, international trade, and demographics as these relate to the workplace. They also predict probable futures related to these topics and provide implications for educators. (CH)
Descriptors: Education Work Relationship, Employment Patterns, Futures (of Society), International Trade
Peer reviewedKutscher, Ronald E.; Personick, Valerie A. – Monthly Labor Review, 1986
Bureau of Labor Statistics data show the industrial sector as a whole in healthy shape, but a few manufacturing industries in deep trouble. These industries include tobacco manufacturers, iron and steel foundries, leather products, and steel manufacturers. Also examines shifts in employment and output, job quality, and outlook for the future. (CT)
Descriptors: Employment Patterns, Employment Projections, Foundries, Manufacturing Industry
Carey, Max L.; Hazelbaker, Kim L. – Occupational Outlook Quarterly, 1986
Discusses the field of temporary employment. Topics covered include (1) the need for temporaries, (2) how the agency concept works, (3) why people become temporary employees, and (4) the types of occupations available on a temporary basis. (CH)
Descriptors: Employment Patterns, Industrial Personnel, Occupational Information, Office Occupations
Burns, William E. – Industrial Education, 1986
The increased expansion of laser technology will create many new jobs and will require workers with many different skills. At the same time, some kinds of occupations will be adversely affected, due to increasing use of laser technology in a broad range of industries. (CT)
Descriptors: Demand Occupations, Employment Opportunities, Employment Patterns, Engineering
Peer reviewedPlue, W. V. – Journal for Vocational Special Needs Education, 1984
Describes a study to determine the kinds of jobs mildly retarded individuals are involved in and to explore factors that may be useful for educators who develop curricula for this population. (JOW)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Education Work Relationship, Employment Patterns, Job Skills
Watts, A. G. – Educational and Vocational Guidance, 1985
Examines four scenarios for the future of employment and unemployment. Presents their main features and identifies some of the key underlying issues they raise. Issues involve the value of work versus leisure, paid versus unpaid work, what forms of work we will pay for, and how this work will be distributed. (CT)
Descriptors: Economic Factors, Employment Patterns, Futures (of Society), Job Development
Peer reviewedWhitener, Leslie A. – Rural Sociology, 1985
Investigates extent of diversity and segmentation within United States migrant farm labor force by examining differences in migrants' attachment to farmwork. Finds three groups of migrants with differing levels of dependence on agriculture differentiated by demographic (age, minority status, region) and employment (earnings) variables. (NEC)
Descriptors: Demography, Economic Factors, Employment Patterns, Farm Labor
Manuel, P. A. – School Guidance Worker, 1985
Discusses the importance of career education in the '80s. Outlines seven future scenarios for guidance, including changes in the delivery mode, infusing career education into the curriculum, the growth of cooperative education, computerization, remedial education for adults, elementary school guidance, and implications of unemployment. (BH)
Descriptors: Career Guidance, Elementary Secondary Education, Employment Patterns, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedTienda, Marta; And Others – International Migration Review, 1984
Presents data on the industrial and occupational allocation of native and foreign-born women from 1970 to 1980. Identifies three components of reallocations of female labor during the seventies: (1) changes in the industrial structure; (2) changes in the distribution of occupations within industries; and (3) unique combinations of particular…
Descriptors: Economic Factors, Employment Patterns, Employment Statistics, Females
Peer reviewedOsterman, Paul – Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 1986
Investigates how the increased use of computers affects clerical and managerial employment. The author finds that the net effect of computers in 1972-1978 was to depress the employment of clerks and managers substantially, but that the pattern over time supports the bureaucratic reorganization hypothesis. (Author/CT)
Descriptors: Administrators, Clerical Workers, Computers, Cost Effectiveness
Peer reviewedAlic, John A.; Harris, Martha Caldwell – Monthly Labor Review, 1986
Semiskilled and "unskilled" workers in semiconductors, computer manufacturing, and consumer electronics industries are more likely than other workers to lose jobs because of technology, imports, and offshore production. However, advances in technology do tend to create jobs for skilled workers. (CT)
Descriptors: Electronics, Employment Patterns, Job Development, Job Skills
Peer reviewedKahne, Hilda – International Journal of Aging and Human Development, 1986
Women age 45 and over make up 40 percent of the older labor force. Their employment-related experience is different and disadvantaged compared to older men. Specific differences which are examined include occupational distribution, earnings, unemployment, poverty, retirement income, and labor force participation rates. (Author/ABL)
Descriptors: Employment Patterns, Employment Problems, Females, Labor Force


