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Title: Education and Training of American Workers
Resulting in 1 citation.
1. Bureau of Labor Statistics
Education and Training of American Workers
Working Paper, Prepared for the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development National Experts Group on Training Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor, Wasington DC, 1990
Cohort(s): NLS General
Publisher: U.S. Department of Labor
Keyword(s): Bureau of Labor Statistics; Current Population Survey (CPS) / CPS-Fertility Supplement; Earnings; Education; Gender Differences; Longitudinal Surveys; NLS Description; Racial Differences; Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP); Training; Vocational Education

This paper describes briefly the following surveys that have been conducted to determine the amount and thrust of employee training in the United States: (1) household surveys including the Current Population Survey, the NLS, the Survey of Income and Program Participation, and the University of Michigan Time Use study; and employer surveys, including the 1974 survey by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the National Institute of Education and National Center for Research in Vocational Education surveys, the Bureau of Labor Statistics Employee Benefit Survey, state and local surveys, the Battelle Human Affairs Research Center survey, and apprenticeship surveys. The paper also describes ways to determine costs and effects of training. The surveys provide the following information: (1) the likelihood of training declines with age, but increases with education; (2) men and whites are more likely to receive training than women and blacks; (3) the likelihood of training increases with firm size; (4) most training is informal; and (5) training increases future earnings of workers, but which kinds of training do so and how well training pays is uncertain. Information not provided by the surveys, however, includes the definition of training, the total amount of training received by workers, the cost of training, and changes in training over time. The report proposes that these questions be answered by a multistage survey. [ERIC ED330892]
Bibliography Citation
Bureau of Labor Statistics. "Education and Training of American Workers." Working Paper, Prepared for the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development National Experts Group on Training Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor, Wasington DC, 1990.