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Peer reviewedRoessler, Richard T.; Hiett, Atherton – Rehabilitation Counseling Bulletin, 1983
Examined the effects of telephone contacts with employers on the rate of return of a mailed one-page questionnaire to identify job development opportunities for rehabilitation clients. Various telephone contacts were no more effective than a standard mail approach in terms of questionnaires returned and jobs listed. (Author/JAC)
Descriptors: Employers, Employment Opportunities, Job Development, Research Methodology
Peer reviewedGreene, Richard – Monthly Labor Review, 1982
Summarizes the findings and methodology of some of the recent innovative labor market studies in the private sector. Emphasis is placed on the micro-data study of the job creation process at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Similar studies at the University of California at Berkeley and at the Brookings Institution are also summarized. (CT)
Descriptors: Employer Attitudes, Employment Patterns, Industry, Job Development
Flanders, Russell B.; Baxter, Neale – Occupational Outlook Quarterly, 1981
An historical look at the changes in the make-up of the American workforce is presented, beginning with the 1820 census. Also discusses the development of career counseling and occupational publications. (CT)
Descriptors: Career Change, Career Counseling, Career Development, Job Development
Peer reviewedTworek, Richard K. – Journal of Allied Health, 1981
Describes the process that an allied health occupation (in this instance, physician's assistant) undergoes to become professionalized. The historical background and definition of traditional professionalism are presented. The evolution of the new professionalism that is characteristic of current allied health occupation is also discussed.…
Descriptors: Allied Health Occupations, History, Job Development, Physicians Assistants
Worklife, 1977
Excerpts from President Carter's economic message to the Congress, proposing a recovery package which included (1) an increase of authorizations for local public works, (2) an expansion of public service employment, (3) expansion of training and youth programs under the Comprehensive Employment and Training Act (CETA), and (4) an increase in the…
Descriptors: Employment Programs, Federal Government, Government Role, Job Development
Peer reviewedWorkman, Michael – Human Resource Development Quarterly, 2003
Call center staff answered calls in 4 treatments: alignment job design (n=35), autonomous work teams (n=35), high-involvement work processes (n=43), and controls (n=36). Job satisfaction improved in alignment job design and high-involvement treatments, most significantly in the latter. Skill level and attitude toward autonomous work might have…
Descriptors: Intervention, Job Development, Job Satisfaction, Organizational Development
Peer reviewedMunro, Anne; Rainbird, Helen – New Technology, Work and Employment, 2002
Interviews (n=350) and a survey (n=323) of managers, trainers, and union representatives in British health care agencies showed that technology caused some job enlargement and enrichment; positive or negative effects depended on context. Other jobs were deskilled due to work organization, not technology. Technology's impact on job change was…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Job Development, Job Skills, Public Sector
Leibowitz, Zandy B.; And Others – Training and Development Journal, 1990
Career plateauing is a major issue due to demographics, changes in organizational structure, economic cycles, and changing worker values. Managers and organizations can address with specific strategies the four types of plateaued employees: productively, pleasantly, partially, and passively plateaued. (SK)
Descriptors: Administrative Organization, Career Development, Career Ladders, Job Development
Cunningham, J. Barton; Eberle, Ted – Personnel (AMA), 1990
Describes job design alternatives--job enrichment, the job characteristics model, Japanese style management, and quality-of-worklife approaches. Focuses on the problems that human resources professionals may encounter when attempting to implement these approaches. (Author/JOW)
Descriptors: Administrative Organization, Human Resources, Job Development, Job Enrichment
Nickle, Blair Warman; Maddox, Robert C. – Training and Development Journal, 1988
Although midlife transition is an emotional crisis for an individual, it means expensive turnover for the organization. There are three approaches an organization can take in dealing with midlife transitions: education, counseling, and restructuring jobs and tasks. Education is necessary before counseling and restructuring can begin. (JOW)
Descriptors: Adult Counseling, Adult Development, Employees, Employer Employee Relationship
Peer reviewedSilvestri, 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
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 reviewedSmyer, 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 reviewedCastells, 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


