Data Dictionary: Census 1990 on 2010 Geographies
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Data Source:U.S. Census Bureau & Social Explorer
Table: P30. Age, Language Spoken At Home, And Linguistic Isolation [52]
Universe: Persons 5 years and over
Table Details
P30. Age, Language Spoken At Home, And Linguistic Isolation
Universe: Persons 5 years and over
VariableLabel
RC1990SF3_005_P030_001
RC1990SF3_005_P030_002
RC1990SF3_005_P030_003
RC1990SF3_005_P030_004
RC1990SF3_005_P030_005
RC1990SF3_005_P030_006
RC1990SF3_005_P030_007
RC1990SF3_005_P030_008
RC1990SF3_005_P030_009
RC1990SF3_005_P030_010
RC1990SF3_005_P030_011
RC1990SF3_005_P030_012
RC1990SF3_005_P030_013
RC1990SF3_005_P030_014
RC1990SF3_005_P030_015
RC1990SF3_005_P030_016
RC1990SF3_005_P030_017
RC1990SF3_005_P030_018
RC1990SF3_005_P030_019
RC1990SF3_005_P030_020
RC1990SF3_005_P030_021
RC1990SF3_005_P030_022
RC1990SF3_005_P030_023
RC1990SF3_005_P030_024
RC1990SF3_005_P030_025
RC1990SF3_005_P030_026
RC1990SF3_005_P030_027
RC1990SF3_005_P030_028
RC1990SF3_005_P030_029
RC1990SF3_005_P030_030
RC1990SF3_005_P030_031
RC1990SF3_005_P030_032
RC1990SF3_005_P030_033
RC1990SF3_005_P030_034
RC1990SF3_005_P030_035
RC1990SF3_005_P030_036
RC1990SF3_005_P030_037
RC1990SF3_005_P030_038
RC1990SF3_005_P030_039
RC1990SF3_005_P030_040
RC1990SF3_005_P030_041
RC1990SF3_005_P030_042
RC1990SF3_005_P030_043
RC1990SF3_005_P030_044
RC1990SF3_005_P030_045
RC1990SF3_005_P030_046
RC1990SF3_005_P030_047
RC1990SF3_005_P030_048
RC1990SF3_005_P030_049
RC1990SF3_005_P030_050
RC1990SF3_005_P030_051
RC1990SF3_005_P030_052
Relevant Documentation:
Excerpt from: Social Explorer, U.S. Census Bureau; Census of Population and Housing, 1990: Summary Tape File 3 on CD-ROM [machine-readable data files] / prepared by the Bureau of the Census. Washington: The Bureau [producer and distributor], 1991.
 
Age
The data on age were derived from answers to questionnaire item 5, which was asked of all persons. The age classification is based on the age of the person in complete years as of April 1, 1990. The age response in question 5a was used normally to represent a person's age. However, when the age response was unacceptable or unavailable, a person's age was derived from an acceptable year-of-birth response in question 5b.

Data on age are used to determine the applicability of other questions for a person and to classify other characteristics in census tabulations. Age data are needed to interpret most social and economic characteristics used to plan and examine many programs and policies. Therefore, age is tabulated by single years of age and by many different groupings, such as 5-year age groups.

Some tabulations are shown by the age of the householder. These data were derived from the age responses for each householder. (For more information on householder, see the discussion under "Household Type and Relationship.")

Median Age
This measure divides the age distribution into two equal parts: one-half of the cases falling below the median value and one-half above the value. Generally, median age is computed on the basis of more detailed age intervals than are shown in some census publications; thus, a median based on a less detailed distribution may differ slightly from a corresponding median for the same population based on a more detailed distribution. (For more information on medians, see the discussion under "Derived Measures.")

Limitation of the Data
Counts in 1970 and 1980 for persons 100 years old and over were substantially overstated. Improvements were made in the questionnaire design, in the allocation procedures, and to the respondent instruction guide to attempt to minimize this problem for the 1990 census.

Review of detailed 1990 census information indicated that respondents tended to provide their age as of the date of completion of the questionnaire, not their age as of April 1, 1990. In addition, there may have been a tendency for respondents to round their age up if they were close to having a birthday. It is likely that approximately 10 percent of persons in most age groups are actually 1 year younger. For most single years of age, the misstatements are largely offsetting. The problem is most pronounced at age 0 because persons lost to age 1 may not have been fully offset by the inclusion of babies born after April 1, 1990, and because there may have been more rounding up to age 1 to avoid reporting age as 0 years. (Age in complete months was not collected for infants under age 1.)

The reporting of age 1 year older than age on April 1, 1990, is likely to have been greater in areas where the census data were collected later in 1990. The magnitude of this problem was much less in the three previous censuses where age was typically derived from respondent data on year of birth and quarter of birth. (For more information on the design of the age question, see the section below that discusses "Comparability.")

Comparability
Age data have been collected in every census. For the first time since 1950, the 1990 data are not available by quarter year of age. This change was made so that coded information could be obtained for both age and year of birth. In each census since 1940, the age of a person was assigned when it was not reported. In censuses before 1940, with the exception of 1880, persons of unknown age were shown as a separate category. Since 1960, assignment of unknown age has been performed by a general procedure described as "imputation." The specific procedures for imputing age have been different in each census. (For more information on imputation, see Appendix C, Accuracy of the Data.)

Excerpt from: Social Explorer, U.S. Census Bureau; Census of Population and Housing, 1990: Summary Tape File 3 on CD-ROM [machine-readable data files] / prepared by the Bureau of the Census. Washington: The Bureau [producer and distributor], 1991.
 
Household Language
In households where one or more persons (age 5 years old or over) speak a language other than English, the household language assigned to all household members is the non-English language spoken by the first person with a non-English language in the following order:

householder, spouse, parent, sibling, child, grandchild, other relative, stepchild, unmarried partner, housemate or roommate, roomer, boarder, or foster child, or other nonrelative. Thus, persons who speak only English may have a non-English household language assigned to them in tabulations of persons by household language.

Figure 1. Four- and Twenty-Five-Group Classifications of 1990 Census Languages Spoken at Home with Illustrative Examples
Four-Group ClassificationTwenty-Five-Group ClassificationExamples
Spanish Other Indo-EuropeanSpanishSpanish, Ladino
 FrenchFrench, Cajun,French Creole
 Italian 
 Portuguese 
 German 
 Yiddish 
 Other WestAfrikaans, Dutch,
 GermanicPennsylvania Dutch
 ScandanavianDanish, Norwegian, Swedish
 Polish 
 Russian 
 South SlavicSerbocroatian, Bulgarian, Macedonian, Slovene
 Other SlavicCzech, Slovak, Ukranian
 Greek 
 IndicHindi, Bengali, Gujarathi, Punjabi, Romany, Sinhalese
 Other Indo European,Armenian, Gaelic,
 not elsewhere classifiedLithuanian, Persian
Languages of Asia and the PacificChinese 
 Japanese 
 Mon-KhmerCambodian
 Tagalog 
 Korean 
 Vietnamese 
 Other languagesChamorro, Dravidian
 (part)Languages, Hawaiian,
  Ilocano, Thai, Turkish
All other languagesArabic 
 Hungarian 
 Native North 
 American languages 
 Other languagesAmharic, Syriac,
 (part)Finnish, Hebrew,
  Languages of
  Central and South
  America, Other
  Languages of Africa


Excerpt from: Social Explorer, U.S. Census Bureau; Census of Population and Housing, 1990: Summary Tape File 3 on CD-ROM [machine-readable data files] / prepared by the Bureau of the Census. Washington: The Bureau [producer and distributor], 1991.
 
Linguistic Isolation
A household in which no person age 14 years or over speaks only English and no person age 14 years or over who speaks a language other than English speaks English "Very well" is classified as "linguistically isolated." All the members of a linguistically isolated household are tabulated as linguistically isolated, including members under age 14 years who may speak only English.

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