<?xml version='1.0' encoding='utf-8'?>
      <oai_dc:dc xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"
xmlns:oai_dc="http://www.openarchives.org/OAI/2.0/oai_dc/">
      <dc:title>Occupational Measures from the Dictionary of Occupational Titles for 1980 Census Detailed Occupations</dc:title>
		
      		<dc:creator>England, Paula</dc:creator>
      	
      		<dc:creator>Kilbourne, Barbara</dc:creator>
      	
		
      		<dc:subject>census data</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>job skills</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>job training</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>labor force</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>occupations</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>work environment</dc:subject>
      	
      		<dc:subject>workers</dc:subject>
      	
		
      		<dc:subject>ICPSR.IV.C</dc:subject>
      	
      	<dc:description>This collection provides average scores on selected
variables from the Dictionary of Occupational Titles for 1980 Census
occupational categories. The dataset was prepared using a sample of
individuals from the 1970 Census whose occupations had been coded with
both 1970 and 1980 Census detailed occupational codes. This file, known
as the Treiman file, was merged with selected variables from the FOURTH
EDITION DICTIONARY OF OCCUPATIONAL TITLES, using 1970 occupational
categories as the merge variable. A score on each Dictionary of
Occupational Titles (DOT) variable was then computed for each 1980
occupational category. Included among the DOT variables were such
characteristics as (1) level of complexity at which the worker
functions in terms of data, people, and things, (2) training required
to do the job, (3) verbal, numerical, spatial, and other aptitudes
needed to perform the job, (4) percent of workers in the job with a
preference for a specific type of job activity such as abstract and
creative activity or activity requiring business contact with people,
(5) temperamental attributes such as adaptability to performing under
stress and adaptability to performing repetitive work, (6) physical
demands of the job, and (7) environmental conditions under which the
work is performed. Measures of mean hourly and annual earnings for both
men and women in each occupation and number of men and women in each
occupation also are included.</dc:description>
		
      	<dc:date>1992-02-16</dc:date>
	    
      		<dc:type>aggregate data</dc:type>
      	
      	<dc:identifier>8942</dc:identifier>
      	<dc:identifier>10.3886/ICPSR08942.v1</dc:identifier>
    	
      		<dc:source>(1) A sample from the 1970 United States Census, (2) 
 FOURTH EDITION DICTIONARY OF OCCUPATIONAL TITLES. United States 
 Department of Labor, 1977. (3) FOURTH EDITION DICTIONARY OF 
 OCCUPATIONAL TITLES SCORES FOR 1970 CATEGORIES. Committee on 
 Occupational Classification and Analysis, National Academy of Sciences, 
January 1981.</dc:source>
      	
    	
      		<dc:coverage>United States</dc:coverage>
      	
		
      		<dc:coverage>1980</dc:coverage>
      	
      	<dc:rights> ICPSR metadata records are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 
        3.0 United States License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/us/).</dc:rights>
      </oai_dc:dc>
