Premium access provided by: MIT Personal account: Create | Sign in
Data Dictionary: ACS 2009 (1-Year Estimates)
you are here: choose a survey survey data set table details
Data Source:U.S. Census Bureau
Table: B24124. Detailed Occupation for the Full-Time, Year-Round Civilian Employed Population 16 Years and Over [499]
Universe: Full-time, year-round civilian employed population 16 years and Over
Table Details
B24124. Detailed Occupation for the Full-Time, Year-Round Civilian Employed Population 16 Years and Over
Universe: Full-time, year-round civilian employed population 16 years and Over
VariableLabel
B24124001
B24124002
B24124003
B24124004
B24124005
B24124006
B24124007
B24124008
B24124009
B24124010
B24124011
B24124012
B24124013
B24124014
B24124015
B24124016
B24124017
B24124018
B24124019
B24124020
B24124021
B24124022
B24124023
B24124024
B24124025
B24124026
B24124027
B24124028
B24124029
B24124030
B24124031
B24124032
B24124033
B24124034
B24124035
B24124036
B24124037
B24124038
B24124039
B24124040
B24124041
B24124042
B24124043
B24124044
B24124045
B24124046
B24124047
B24124048
B24124049
B24124050
B24124051
B24124052
B24124053
B24124054
B24124055
B24124056
B24124057
B24124058
B24124059
B24124060
B24124061
B24124062
B24124063
B24124064
B24124065
B24124066
B24124067
B24124068
B24124069
B24124070
B24124071
B24124072
B24124073
B24124074
B24124075
B24124076
B24124077
B24124078
B24124079
B24124080
B24124081
B24124082
B24124083
B24124084
B24124085
B24124086
B24124087
B24124088
B24124089
B24124090
B24124091
B24124092
B24124093
B24124094
B24124095
B24124096
B24124097
B24124098
B24124099
B24124100
B24124101
B24124102
B24124103
B24124104
B24124105
B24124106
B24124107
B24124108
B24124109
B24124110
B24124111
B24124112
B24124113
B24124114
B24124115
B24124116
B24124117
B24124118
B24124119
B24124120
B24124121
B24124122
B24124123
B24124124
B24124125
B24124126
B24124127
B24124128
B24124129
B24124130
B24124131
B24124132
B24124133
B24124134
B24124135
B24124136
B24124137
B24124138
B24124139
B24124140
B24124141
B24124142
B24124143
B24124144
B24124145
B24124146
B24124147
B24124148
B24124149
B24124150
B24124151
B24124152
B24124153
B24124154
B24124155
B24124156
B24124157
B24124158
B24124159
B24124160
B24124161
B24124162
B24124163
B24124164
B24124165
B24124166
B24124167
B24124168
B24124169
B24124170
B24124171
B24124172
B24124173
B24124174
B24124175
B24124176
B24124177
B24124178
B24124179
B24124180
B24124181
B24124182
B24124183
B24124184
B24124185
B24124186
B24124187
B24124188
B24124189
B24124190
B24124191
B24124192
B24124193
B24124194
B24124195
B24124196
B24124197
B24124198
B24124199
B24124200
B24124201
B24124202
B24124203
B24124204
B24124205
B24124206
B24124207
B24124208
B24124209
B24124210
B24124211
B24124212
B24124213
B24124214
B24124215
B24124216
B24124217
B24124218
B24124219
B24124220
B24124221
B24124222
B24124223
B24124224
B24124225
B24124226
B24124227
B24124228
B24124229
B24124230
B24124231
B24124232
B24124233
B24124234
B24124235
B24124236
B24124237
B24124238
B24124239
B24124240
B24124241
B24124242
B24124243
B24124244
B24124245
B24124246
B24124247
B24124248
B24124249
B24124250
B24124251
B24124252
B24124253
B24124254
B24124255
B24124256
B24124257
B24124258
B24124259
B24124260
B24124261
B24124262
B24124263
B24124264
B24124265
B24124266
B24124267
B24124268
B24124269
B24124270
B24124271
B24124272
B24124273
B24124274
B24124275
B24124276
B24124277
B24124278
B24124279
B24124280
B24124281
B24124282
B24124283
B24124284
B24124285
B24124286
B24124287
B24124288
B24124289
B24124290
B24124291
B24124292
B24124293
B24124294
B24124295
B24124296
B24124297
B24124298
B24124299
B24124300
B24124301
B24124302
B24124303
B24124304
B24124305
B24124306
B24124307
B24124308
B24124309
B24124310
B24124311
B24124312
B24124313
B24124314
B24124315
B24124316
B24124317
B24124318
B24124319
B24124320
B24124321
B24124322
B24124323
B24124324
B24124325
B24124326
B24124327
B24124328
B24124329
B24124330
B24124331
B24124332
B24124333
B24124334
B24124335
B24124336
B24124337
B24124338
B24124339
B24124340
B24124341
B24124342
B24124343
B24124344
B24124345
B24124346
B24124347
B24124348
B24124349
B24124350
B24124351
B24124352
B24124353
B24124354
B24124355
B24124356
B24124357
B24124358
B24124359
B24124360
B24124361
B24124362
B24124363
B24124364
B24124365
B24124366
B24124367
B24124368
B24124369
B24124370
B24124371
B24124372
B24124373
B24124374
B24124375
B24124376
B24124377
B24124378
B24124379
B24124380
B24124381
B24124382
B24124383
B24124384
B24124385
B24124386
B24124387
B24124388
B24124389
B24124390
B24124391
B24124392
B24124393
B24124394
B24124395
B24124396
B24124397
B24124398
B24124399
B24124400
B24124401
B24124402
B24124403
B24124404
B24124405
B24124406
B24124407
B24124408
B24124409
B24124410
B24124411
B24124412
B24124413
B24124414
B24124415
B24124416
B24124417
B24124418
B24124419
B24124420
B24124421
B24124422
B24124423
B24124424
B24124425
B24124426
B24124427
B24124428
B24124429
B24124430
B24124431
B24124432
B24124433
B24124434
B24124435
B24124436
B24124437
B24124438
B24124439
B24124440
B24124441
B24124442
B24124443
B24124444
B24124445
B24124446
B24124447
B24124448
B24124449
B24124450
B24124451
B24124452
B24124453
B24124454
B24124455
B24124456
B24124457
B24124458
B24124459
B24124460
B24124461
B24124462
B24124463
B24124464
B24124465
B24124466
B24124467
B24124468
B24124469
B24124470
B24124471
B24124472
B24124473
B24124474
B24124475
B24124476
B24124477
B24124478
B24124479
B24124480
B24124481
B24124482
B24124483
B24124484
B24124485
B24124486
B24124487
B24124488
B24124489
B24124490
B24124491
B24124492
B24124493
B24124494
B24124495
B24124496
B24124497
B24124498
B24124499
Relevant Documentation:
Excerpt from: Social Explorer; U.S. Census Bureau; American Community Survey 2009 Summary File: Technical Documentation.
 
Worker
This term appears in connection with several subjects: employment status, journey-to-work questions, class of worker, weeks worked in the past 12 months, and number of workers in family in the past 12 months. The meaning varies and, therefore, should be determined in each case by referring to the definition of the subject in which it appears. When used in the concepts "workers in family" and "full-time, year-round workers," the term "worker" relates to the meaning of work defined for the "work experience" subject.

Excerpt from: Social Explorer; U.S. Census Bureau; American Community Survey 2009 Summary File: Technical Documentation.
 
Occupation
Occupation describes the kind of work a person does on the job. Occupation data were derived from answers to questions 45 and 46. Question 45 asks: "What kind of work was this person doing?" Question 46 asks: "What were this person's most important activities or duties?"

These questions were asked of all people 15 years old and over who had worked in the past 5 years. For employed people, the data refer to the person's job during the previous week. For those who worked two or more jobs, the data refer to the job where the person worked the greatest number of hours. For unemployed people and people who are not currently employed but report having a job within the last five years, the data refer to their last job.

These questions describe the work activity and occupational experience of the American labor force. Data are used to formulate policy and programs for employment, career development and training; to provide information on the occupational skills of the labor force in a given area to analyze career trends; and to measure compliance with antidiscrimination policies. Companies use these data to decide where to locate new plants, stores, or offices.

Coding Procedures
Occupation statistics are compiled from data that are coded based on the detailed classification systems developed for Census 2000 and modified in 2002. This system consists of 509 specific occupational categories, for employed people, including military, arranged into 23 major occupational groups. This classification was developed based on the Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) Manual: 2000, published by the Executive Office of the President, Office of Management and Budget. Respondents provided the data for the tabulations by writing on the questionnaires descriptions of the kind of work and activities they are doing. Clerical staff in the National Processing Center in Jeffersonville, Indiana converted the written questionnaire descriptions to codes by comparing these descriptions to entries in the Alphabetical Index of Industries and Occupations. Some occupation groups are related closely to certain industries. Operators of transportation equipment, farm operators and workers, and healthcare providers account for major portions of their respective industries of transportation, agriculture, and health care. However, the industry categories include people in other occupations. For example, people employed in agriculture include truck drivers and bookkeepers; people employed in the transportation industry include mechanics, freight handlers, and payroll clerks; and people employed in the health care profession include janitors, security guards, and secretaries.

Editing Procedures
Following the coding operation, a computer edit and allocation process excludes all responses that should not be included in the universe, and evaluates the consistency of the remaining responses. The codes for occupation are checked for consistency with the industry and class of worker data provided for that respondent. Occasionally respondents supply occupation descriptions that are not sufficiently specific for precise classification, or they do not report on these questions at all. Certain types of incomplete entries are corrected using the Alphabetical Index of Industries and Occupations. If one or more of the three codes (occupation, industry, or class of worker) is blank after the edit, a code is assigned from a donor respondent who is a similar person based on questions such as age, sex, educational attainment, income, employment status, and weeks worked. If all of the labor force and income data are blank, all of these economic questions are assigned from a "similar" person who had provided all the necessary data.

Question/Concept History
Occupation data have been collected during decennial censuses since 1850. Starting with the 2010 Census, occupation data will no longer be collected during the decennial census. Long form data collection has transitioned to the American Community Survey. The American Community Survey began collecting data on occupation in 1996. The questions on occupation were designed to be consistent with the 1990 Census questions on occupation. American Community Survey questions on occupation have remained consistent between 1996 and 2009.

Limitation of the Data
Beginning in 2006, the population in group quarters (GQ) was included in the ACS. Some types of GQ populations have occupational distributions that are different from the household population. The inclusion of the GQ population could therefore have a noticeable impact on the occupational distribution in some geographic areas with a substantial GQ population. Data on occupation, industry, and class of worker are collected for the respondents current primary job or the most recent job for those who are not employed but have worked in the last 5 years. Other labor force questions, such as questions on earnings or work hours, may have different reference periods and may not limit the response to the primary job. Although the prevalence of multiple jobs is low, data on some labor force items may not exactly correspond to the reported occupation, industry, or class of worker of a respondent.

Comparability
Comparability of occupation data was affected by a number of factors, primarily the system used to classify the questionnaire responses. Changes in the occupational classification system limit comparability of the data from one year to another. These changes are needed to recognize the "birth" of new occupations, the death of others, the growth and decline in existing occupations, and the desire of analysts and other users for more detail in the presentation of the data. Probably the greatest cause of noncomparability is the movement of a segment from one category to another. Changes in the nature of jobs, respondent terminology, and refinement of category composition made these movements necessary.

ACS data from 1996 to 1999 used the same occupation classification systems used for the 1990 census; therefore, the data are comparable. Since 1990, the occupation classification has been revised to reflect changes within the Standard Occupational Classification (SOC). These changes were reflected in the Census 2000 occupation codes. The 2000-2002 ACS data used the same occupation classification systems used for Census 2000, therefore, the data are comparable. Because of the possibility of new occupations being added to the list of codes, the Census Bureau needed to have more flexibility in adding codes. Consequently, in 2002, census occupation codes were expanded from three-digit codes to four-digit codes. For occupation, this entailed adding a "0" to the end of each occupation code. Data are otherwise comparable. For more information on occupational comparability across classification systems, please see technical paper #65: The Relationship Between the 1990 Census and Census 2000 Industry and Occupation Classification Systems. See the 2009 Code List for Occupation Code List. See also, Industry and Class of Worker.

Full-Time, Year-Round Workers
All people 16 years old and over who usually worked 35 hours or more per week for 50 to 52 weeks in the past 12 months.

Excerpt from: Social Explorer; U.S. Census Bureau; American Community Survey 2009 Summary File: Technical Documentation.
 
Employed
This category includes all civilians 16 years old and over who either (1) were "at work," that is, those who did any work at all during the reference week as paid employees, worked in their own business or profession, worked on their own farm, or worked 15 hours or more as unpaid workers on a family farm or in a family business; or (2) were "with a job but not at work", that is, those who did not work during the reference week but had jobs or businesses from which they were temporarily absent due to illness, bad weather, industrial dispute, vacation, or other personal reasons. Excluded from the employed are people whose only activity consisted of work around the house or unpaid volunteer work for religious, charitable, and similar organizations; also excluded are all institutionalized people and people on active duty in the United States Armed Forces.

©2024 Social Explorer. All rights reserved.