To complement data on respondents' educational experiences collected during the yearly interviews, NLSY97 staff collected transcripts directly from respondents' high schools once the youths graduated or left school. Once the transcripts were received from the schools, survey staff coded the transcript record into a standard format. The resulting created variables comprise a history of the respondent's terms in school, courses taken, and other academic indicators. This appendix describes the survey materials used during data collection and explains the procedures and criteria for data entry and coding. It also lists specific details about individual Transcript Survey variables.
Click a topic below to view details about transcript data:
Conducted in 1999-2000, Wave 1 of the NLSY97 Transcript Survey sought hard copy transcripts from 1,622 NLSY97 respondents who had provided signed authorization for transcript collection, and who were no longer enrolled in high school in spring 2000. Non-enrollment occurred when the youth either graduated from high school or dropped out of school and was at least 18 years old. From Wave I, coded transcript data are available for 1,417 respondents.
To complete the Transcript Survey effort, a second and final wave of the NLSY97 Transcript Survey requested hard copy transcripts from 5,701 eligible NLSY97 respondents. Youth respondents eligible for the Wave 2 Transcript Survey had a signed Permission to Contact School form on file, a known high school reported during a previous interview, and did not have a transcript collected during Wave I. The vast majority of NLSY97 respondents finished their high school careers by the end of the 2004 academic year, resulting in complete transcript records submitted from the schools. Transcript data was collected and coded for 4,815 respondents during Wave 2. Transcript data combined from both waves are available for 6,232 respondents.
User note about transcript variables
All transcript variables are listed as round 3 variables in the dataset. These variables are associated with round 3 because that was the timing of the first wave of transcript data collection.
NORC mailed a transcript request packet to each school from which an NLSY97 youth received his or her high school diploma, or to the last school the youth reported attending in the Youth interview. The packet contained informational materials about the NLSY97 and a pamphlet describing the NLSY97 Transcript Survey. In addition, packets included the following items:
- a cover letter addressed to the school principal
- a one-page cover sheet questionnaire collecting school-specific grading and transcript policies
- a Student Request list identifying the sampled students in the school
- the signed permission forms for these students
These documents are available in PDF form at the links below:
Collection of the Transcript Data, Wave 1 - example documents (PDF)
Collection of the Transcript Data, Wave 2 - example documents (PDF)
Organization of the data. There are several different types of variables in the transcript data file. First, at the school level the variable TRANS_SCH_CAT reports whether a course catalog was received from the school to aid in coding. The highest number of schools reported for any respondent is 12, so this variable is repeated 12 times. This course catalog variable also functions as the identification number of the school. During the data entry process described below, each school attended by a respondent was assigned a unique sequence ID number between 1 and 12, with the school that provided the transcript always listed as school #01. These numbers were used in variables that report which school the respondent attended in each term-for example, if a respondent has a value of 4 for term 1, then he or she attended school #04 in the course catalog variables. This school ID number does not link to any variables in the main data file.
Second, the transcript file includes information about the respondents that is not associated with a specific term or course. For example, these variables present test scores on a variety of achievement tests (ACT, PSAT, SAT, SAT II, AP), information on absences and tardies, the student's school completion status, and dates of enrollment. Variables also indicate whether the respondent participated in programs such as gifted, bilingual, or special education.
A number of variables refer to the respondent's terms of enrollment. For up to 28 terms, these items report the beginning and ending dates of the term, the way in which the school year is divided (such as a season, entire year, or another term based system), the academic year of the term, the respondent's grade level that term, and the number of credits earned. A variable listing the school the respondent attended during that term can be linked to the course catalog variable as described above.
Finally, the transcript file provides details about each course appearing on a student's high school transcript. Course-specific variables include the course code from the Revised Secondary School Taxonomy (SST-R), the grade earned in the course, and the credit value of the course. Because schools use many different grading systems, the course grades were converted into a standard scale that can be compared across respondents. A series of variables called "Recoding Status of Grade" indicates how the grade earned variable for each course was created. This process is described in more detail below.
Data entry and processing procedures. The transcript data capture process involved several distinct data entry steps, tailored to the structure of the data, the cleaning and reconciliation needs for the relevant variables, and scheduling requirements of the data collection process. The basic data entry and processing steps utilized during Wave 1 were:
- Entry of course-level data into an Access data capture system from high school transcripts
- Coding of entered course-level data using Access coding system
- Entry of student-level data from Student Request List and high school transcripts into NORC's SurveyCraft Computer-Assisted Data Entry (CADE) system
- Entry and coding of transfer school information from Student Request List, high school transcripts, and NLSY97 youth interview data using Access and SAS programs
- Entry of school-level data from one-page Transcript Cover Sheet into SurveyCraft CADE system
- Assigning course grades to a uniform grade scale using SAS transformations.
Each data entry and processing step is described in greater detail below. Enhancements to transcript processing developed specifically for the Wave 2 effort are noted following each section.
Wave 2 data entry and processing enhancements. Building on the Wave 1 model, the transcript data entry and processing steps were revised, improving the efficiency of the process and enhancing the quality of the data. The revised process included adding an edit and retrieval task at the beginning, streamlining the data entry instruments for a one-time, comprehensive entry task, utilizing an improved coding system separate from the data entry instrument, and building an auto-coding program.
Wave 2 transcript editing process. Due to the wide variation in the layout of high school transcript records, an editing and review task was implemented prior to data entry. Editing provided the first level of standardization of each transcript in preparation for data entry and also allowed clerks to identify problematic transcripts requiring a retrieval contact with the school. Editor staff identified key student level data elements, counted the number of transfer schools reported and sequenced term and course data as it appeared on the transcript. Editors highlighted terms and dates on the transcript, which created a series of reference points to maintain the sequence of courses and terms during data entry. Editor staff also reviewed the transcript for problematic or missing course and term data. If a potential data entry or coding problem existed, a retrieval form was completed and reviewed by a supervisor to determine whether a call to the school was necessary for further clarification.
Wave 1 course-level data entry. Course-level data include the course title, course number (assigned by school), grade earned, credits earned, and honors designation. For matching purposes, the school ID was assigned and term dates were captured during this phase of data entry. Entry was performed using an MSAccess data-capture system. All courses were independently entered twice. Where entry and re-entry matched perfectly, no further quality control was performed. If one or more discrepancies were found electronically between the entry and re-entry, a supervisor adjudicated the two data-entered versions with the original hard copy transcript to determine the accurate values. Courses were entered in the order that they appeared on the transcript. This order varied from school to school, with systems including chronologically, alphabetically by course title, numerically by course number, etc.
Wave 1 data entry of student-specific data down to the term level. All other student-specific data were captured in a SurveyCraft instrument for computer-assisted data entry. These variables include the student's enrollment in gifted, special education, or bilingual programs, standardized test scores, dates of enrollment at the school, class rank and cumulative grade-point average, term-level information on beginning and ending dates of terms, absences and tardies, and credits earned by term. The SurveyCraft program generated a single record for each youth, containing up to 18 terms of study. Term date information was used to match term-level data with the school attended during that term. All transcripts from a school were data entered at the same time to exploit clerk familiarity with transcript formats and school-specific abbreviations. All transcripts were independently entered twice. Where entry and re-entry matched perfectly, no further quality control was performed. If one or more discrepancies were found electronically between the entry and re-entry, a supervisor adjudicated the two data-entered versions with the original hard copy transcript to determine the accurate values. Terms were entered in chronological order when such sequence could be determined.
Wave 2 data entry system. A more comprehensive SurveyCraft computer-assisted data entry system was constructed for the Wave 2 data processing effort. The updated instrument allowed clerks to key all contents of the transcript at one time, capturing student, school, term and course level data in a series of loops. The editing process allowed a standard transcript sequence to be followed during data entry. Course and term data were reported in a chronological sequence whenever possible. The consolidated CADE system eliminated the need to match course level and term level data from two different systems, allowed data entry to sequence terms in chronological order by school for each youth record, and added another level of quality control through double entry and adjudication of both the data entry and coded items. The same rules for adjudication used during Wave 1 data entry were also applied.
Wave 1 course coding. Course-level data were used for coding courses into the Revised Secondary School Taxonomy (SST-R), a hierarchical framework for high school course offerings. After all course-level data from a transcript had been entered, re-entered, and adjudicated, the transcript was available for course coding. To maximize coder familiarity with school naming and catalog conventions, all transcripts from a school were usually coded together. Coding of all courses was done independently by two coders. If the two codes were not equal, a supervisor adjudicated the discrepancy and assigned a final code. Because many schools did not submit course catalogs or had indecipherable course titles (e.g., Course 1), clerks called some schools directly for assistance in coding, speaking to administrative or instructional staff who were able to clarify course content. The coding process used a menu-driven MSAccess system, which exploited the hierarchical structure of the code frame and prevented coders from inadvertently entering invalid codes. All 'uncodable' courses were reviewed by the coding supervisor and project director where necessary.
Wave 2 course coding. The course coding process in Wave 2 utilized a similar menu driven MSAccess system. After transcript records were entered, re-entered and adjudicated, a flag was set in the data entry system. Flagged transcript records were extracted from the SurveyCraft data on a regular schedule and loaded by batches into the coding system. Within each batch, transcript records were grouped by school to allow clerks to maximize familiarity with school naming and catalog conventions. Along with course level data presented on the coding screen, key term level information, including dates, term season, and grade level were also presented, allowing the clerks to easily reference course titles in the transcript record and course catalog. Mirroring Wave I, each course was coded independently by two different coders, and any discrepancies between the two codes assigned were reviewed by a supervisor responsible for assigning the final code.
Wave 2 auto-coding program. Using course description and coding matches from the Wave 1 coding effort, a list of course descriptions with codes assigned was developed for an auto-coding program. This matching program was run before courses were loaded into the MSAccess coding system. Approximately 25% of all courses coded were completed by the auto-coding program. Project staff reviewed all auto-coded course descriptions and codes assigned for consistency and flagged any discrepancies for manual coding.
Transfer data. Transcripts often included information about courses attended at other institutions. These data could appear either as an original hard copy attachment to the sampled school's transcript or as additional lines on the sampled school's transcript. These terms and courses were data entered during the appropriate stage of data entry, with a designation that the term or course pertained to a transfer school. Course and term-specific information about transferred work was generally complete, but information about the school from which work was transferred was often inadequate for coding purposes. As described above, all terms attended at the same school are associated with the same school ID.
Wave 2 transfer data and sequence of schools and terms. Building on lessons learned during the Wave 1 transcript processing, special effort was made to preserve a chronological sequence within the transcript for course, term and school data reported. The sequence established during the edit and data entry processes was used to order the terms chronologically. When preparing the term level data, the term year and season were used to confirm the sequence. For a small group of cases, the term sequence was difficult to assign when the transcript record indicated attendance at one or more institutions during similar term years. In these instances, attempts to sequence terms were based on the time period reported on the hard copy transcript whenever possible.
School 01 is always associated with the primary school or the school submitting the transcript. For the Wave 2 data, transfer schools are numbered in reverse chronological order as they appear on the transcript, often beginning with the most recent transfer school event moving in reverse order to the earliest transfer school event. In most instances, the school first attended by the student on the transcript will have the highest school number in the SCH_CAT.xx series.
Missing course catalogs and the Internet. For Wave 2 processing, if a series of transfer schools was present for a student, the SCH_CAT.xx variable was set to "no" indicating the catalog was not received. While a catalog for that school may have been received during the data collection period, it may not have been accessible to coding staff during the course of the transcript data collection. When available, online course catalogs were useful in clarifying particular types of coursework reported at a given school and were utilized by supervisors during the adjudication process.
Coursework reported below grade 9. Most transcripts entered and coded span a typical high school career from grades 9 or 10 through 12. For some districts and states, the transcript record includes middle school or junior high coursework, usually taken during grades 7 and 8. Other high school transcripts also record equivalency or classroom coursework eligible for high school credit that was earned while the student was in grade 8 or below. While no effort was made to collect middle school or junior high level coursework for the NLSY97 Transcript Survey, courses taken at these grade levels were coded and have been made available when provided as part of the hard copy transcript record.
School data. The one-page Transcript Cover Sheet provided information for assigning course grades to a uniform grade scale. During Wave 1 transcript processing, these data were entered into a SurveyCraft data capture instrument, once for each school submitting valid transcripts. Ten percent of schools were re-entered, and a supervisor referred to the original hard-copy to adjudicate discrepancies.
Wave 2 Transcript Cover Sheet procedures: Since a small percentage of schools during the Wave 1 effort reported unique grading scales, a data entry system was not built for Wave 2. Rather, the grade scale data were captured by a data processing clerk inside a spreadsheet containing high and low equivalents for each letter grade. An entry was made for each school submitting valid transcripts and a completed Transcript Cover Sheet. A supervisor reviewed the contents of the spreadsheet to ensure accuracy. When discrepancies reported on the Transcript Cover Sheet were discovered, the school was contacted as part of the retrieval process for clarification. The final grade scale spreadsheet was used in the standardized course grade procedures noted below.
Course grades. High school transcripts included a variety of systems for course grades, including letter grades or numbers. For ease of comparison, these were standardized into a uniform grading system. The standardized grading scale for the resulting CRS_GRADE variable ranges from 01 to 20. Table 1 lists the corresponding letter grades for each of the CRS_GRADE values.
CRS_GRADE |
Corresponding Letter Grade |
---|---|
01 |
A+ |
02 |
A |
03 |
A- |
04 |
B+ |
05 |
B |
06 |
B- |
07 |
C+ |
08 |
C |
09 |
C- |
10 |
D+ |
11 |
D |
12 |
D- |
13 |
F |
14 |
Pass, satisfactory or credit |
15 |
Unsatisfactory or no credit |
16 |
Withdrew or dropped course |
17 |
Incomplete |
18 |
Non-graded course or audit |
19 |
Blank, no grade provided |
20 |
Unrecodable grade |
In addition to the standardized grade variable, survey staff created a variable for each course called CRS_GRADE_RECODE_STATUS. This variable provides information on how the CRS_GRADE variable was created from the information provided by the school. The values of the recoding status variable are listed in Table 2.
CRS_GRADE_RECODE_STATUS |
Recoding Status |
---|---|
0 |
Directly recoded |
1 |
Recoded using grade specifications of own school |
2 |
Recoded using standard grade specifications |
3 |
Uncodable grade |
Each standardized grade was assigned using one of the following four methods:
- The transcript reported letter grades using the system in Table 1 above. All letter grades were directly assigned to the corresponding standardized grade in Table 1. Letters that could not be classified into one of the categories 1-19 were considered to be unrecodable and included in category 20. In the cases where the CRS_GRADE variable was recoded directly from the grade on the transcript, CRS_GRADE_RECODE_STATUSwas assigned a value of 0.
- The school used numeric grades and provided grading specifications on the one-page Transcript Cover Sheet. For these respondents, numeric grades were converted to standardized grades using the grading specifications provided by the school. For example, if the numeric grade fell within the range for an 'A' as specified by that particular school, it was assigned to category 02. Fewer than 5% of schools provided multiple grading specifications; in all cases, the primary specifications were used. Due to the possibility of transcription errors, numeric grades below 15 were considered to be unrecodable when the minimum passing grade was higher than 15. For all cases where the CRS_GRADE variable was recoded from the transcript using the school's own grading specifications, CRS_GRADE_RECODE_STATUSwas assigned a value of 1.
- The school used letter grades of a type different than those shown in Table 1. During Wave I, grades of 'G' were classified as 05, 'O' and 'E' as 02, and 'O+' and 'E+' as 01. CRS_GRADE_RECODE_STATUS was assigned a value of 2. During Wave 2 grade construction, a variation in the interpretation of the 'E' grade across schools was discovered. In these cases, school specific grade scales were consulted to properly classify "E' grades as 02, 13, 14, or 15. If the grades could not be recoded, then CRS_GRADE was assigned a value of 20 and CRS_GRADE_RECODE_STATUS was assigned to 3.
- The school used numeric grades and did not provide grading specifications. The means of the upper and lower limits of the grading systems across all schools were used to construct the standard grading system shown in Table 3. If the school did not specify its grading specifications, numeric grades (and numeric grades with a qualifier attached) were recoded based on this standard system. For Wave 2, the means of the upper and lower limits of the grading schools were recalculated using the grading systems received from all Wave 2 schools, as a check in the possibility of fluctuation in school grading systems. A different set of limits was developed and can be found in Table 3 below.
Once again, to take into account the possibility of transcription errors, numeric grades below 15 were considered to be unrecodable. CRS_GRADE_RECODE_STATUS was assigned a value of 2 when recoding was done using the standard grade specifications. If the grades could not be recoded, then CRS_GRADE was given a value of 20 and CRS_GRADE_RECODE_STATUS was coded as 3.
Wave | Lower Limit | Upper Limit | CRS_GRADE |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 91 | 100 | 02 |
2 | 90 | 100 | 02 |
1 | 82 | Less than 91 | 05 |
2 | 80 | Less than 90 | 05 |
1 | 73 | Less than 82 | 08 |
2 | 70 | Less than 80 | 08 |
1 | 65 | Less than 73 | 11 |
2 | 60 | Less than 70 | 11 |
1 | 15 | Less than 65 | 13 |
2 | 15 | Less than 59 | 13 |
Transcript Record Status and Transcript Wave
The Transcript Record Status variable is provided for all 8,984 respondents in the NLSY97 sample. For each respondent, the variable indicates whether or not a transcript was requested for the youth, and as appropriate, why a transcript was not requested, or why a transcript was not received. The second variable, available for all respondents with transcript data, reports whether the respondent's data was collected in wave 1 or wave 2 of the transcript survey.
Variable |
Description |
---|---|
TRANS_STAT | High School Transcript Record Status |
TRANS_WAVE | Transcript Wave |
Characteristics of Youth's primary school
These variables pertain to the school from which the youth's transcript was primarily collected. In most cases, this is the last school that the youth attended. Three variables were extracted from Quality Education Data (QED) data files:
Variable |
Description |
---|---|
TRANS_PR_SCH_SECT | chool Sector for Primary School |
TRANS_PR_SCH_DIST_STUDS | Number of Students in Primary School's District |
TRANS_PCT_PR_SCH_9_12_STUDS | Percentage of District Students in grades 9 - 12 |
Four additional variables were coded from a variety of sources. In priority order, we captured information from hard-copy school catalogs, on-line school catalogs, other on-line school information, or telephone calls to school staff. Information is valid for the 2004-2005 school year.
Variable |
Description |
---|---|
TRANS_PR_SCH_CALC | Primary School Offers Calculus? School offers at least one term of calculus. |
TRANS_PR_SCH_AP | Primary School Offers AP Coursework? School offers at least one Advance Placement course. |
TRANS_PR_SCH_IB | Primary School Offers IB Coursework? School offers an International Baccalaureate curriculum. |
TRANS_PR_SCH_VOC_ED | Primary School Offers Vocational Education Courses? School offers at least one vocational education course. |
Data quality flag
This flag, called TRANS_PROBFLAG, was constructed to alert users to the existence of cases whose data we believed was incomplete or flawed in some way that would make the case less likely to provide useful information. The flag is a composite of five separate tests flagging different types of problems; a positive result for any one (or more) of those tests resulted in the case being coded 1 (Yes) for TRANS_PROBFLAG. The variable does not indicate how many flaws are present in a given case. The five component tests are:
Test |
Comment |
---|---|
Is the case missing all Carnegie credit information? | All cases without any Carnegie-credit information were positive for this test, whether the lack resulted from an absence of recorded course credits or an inability to establish Carnegie-credit equivalents for course credits. |
Is the case lacking all usable course-grade information? | Cases were positive for this test if their records contained no grades other than 19 (Blank) or 20 (Unknown). |
Is there a grade-level sequencing problem? | Cases were positive for this test if they showed either a grade-level reversion (lower grades seemingly occurring after higher grades) or an anomalous pattern of grade-levels in the data (e.g., 9th, 10th, and 12th grade courses, but none for 11th grade). |
Does the record show an extremely limited number of courses? | Cases were flagged by this test if their showed 11 or fewer high-school courses. |
Does the case contain a limited number of academic years? | This test codes cases that contain only one or two high-school academic years, where the transcript either indicates that the student graduates or contains no information on why the student left school. |
As part of the NLSY97 Transcript Survey, project staff coded respondents' courses using the revised Secondary School Taxonomy of courses (SST-R). The SST-R codes use a combination of numbers and letters to create a unique identifier for each type and level of high school course content. Because the NLSY97 data base system requires that all data be in numeric form, it was necessary to convert the SST-R codes into numbers for use with the Transcript Survey data. Table 4 indicates the NLSY97 number assigned for each original SST-R code and course description. These codes were used in variables R97128.-R97251. (TRANS_CRS_CODE.01-.175) in the NLSY97 data set.
TRANS_ CRS_ CODE.xxx |
SST-R Code |
SST-R Description |
---|---|---|
1 |
1_11A |
General Mathematics, ESE/Functional |
2 |
1_11B |
General Mathematics, Basic |
3 |
1_11C |
General Mathematics, Regular |
4 |
1_11D |
General Mathematics, Other |
5 |
1_12A |
Consumer Mathematics, ESE/Functional |
6 |
1_12B |
Consumer Mathematics, Regular |
7 |
1_13 |
Pre-Algebra |
8 |
1_14 |
Algebra 1 |
9 |
1_15 |
Geometry |
10 |
1_16 |
Algebra 2 through Pre-Calculus |
11 |
1_17A |
Advanced Mathematics, Calculus |
12 |
1_17B |
Advanced Mathematics, AP/IB |
13 |
1_17C |
Advanced Mathematics, Other |
14 |
1_18 |
Unified Mathematics |
15 |
1_19A |
Occupationally-Related Mathematics, ESE/Functional |
16 |
1_19B |
Occupationally-Related Mathematics, Regular |
17 |
1_21A |
Survey Science, Basic |
18 |
1_21B |
Survey Science, Specialized Topics |
19 |
1_21C |
Survey Science, Integrated/Unified Topics |
20 |
1_22A |
Biological Science, Basic |
21 |
1_22B |
Biological Science, Regular |
22 |
1_22C |
BIO II ; Biological Science, Advanced and Honors |
23 |
1_22D |
Biological Science, Specialized Topics |
24 |
1_22E |
Biological Science, AP/IB |
25 |
1_23A |
Chemistry, Basic |
26 |
1_23B |
Chemistry, Regular |
27 |
1_23C |
Chemistry, Advanced and Honors |
28 |
1_23D |
Chemistry, Specialized Topics |
29 |
1_23E |
Chemistry, AP/IB |
30 |
1_24A |
Physics, Basic |
31 |
1_24B |
Physics, Regular |
32 |
1_24C |
Physics, Advanced and Honors |
33 |
1_24D |
Physics, Specialized Topics |
34 |
1_24E |
Physics, AP/IB |
35 |
1_25A |
Earth Science, Basic |
36 |
1_25B |
Earth Science, Regular |
37 |
1_25C |
Earth Science, Advanced and Honors |
38 |
1_25D |
Earth Science, Specialized Topics |
39 |
1_26A |
Physical Science, Basic |
40 |
1_26B |
Physical Science, Regular |
41 |
1_26C |
Physical Science, Advanced and Honors |
42 |
1_26D |
Physical Science, Specialized Topics |
43 |
1_27 |
Engineering |
44 |
1_31A |
English Survey, Language Skills |
45 |
1_31B |
English Survey, Grades 7 and 8 |
46 |
1_31C1 |
English Survey, ESE/Functional, Grade 9 |
47 |
1_31C2 |
English Survey, ESE/Functional, Grade 10 |
48 |
1_31C3 |
English Survey, ESE/Functional, Grade 11 |
49 |
1_31C4 |
English Survey, ESE/Functional, Grade 12 |
50 |
1_31D1 |
English Survey, Basic, Grade 9 |
51 |
1_31D2 |
English Survey, Basic, Grade 10 |
52 |
1_31D3 |
English Survey, Basic, Grade 11 |
53 |
1_31D4 |
English Survey, Basic, Grade 12 |
54 |
1_31E1 |
English Survey, Regular, Grade 9 |
55 |
1_31E2 |
English Survey, Regular, Grade 10 |
56 |
1_31E3 |
English Survey, Regular, Grade 11 |
57 |
1_31E4 |
English Survey, Regular, Grade 12 |
58 |
1_31F1 |
English Survey, Advanced and Honors, Grade 9 |
59 |
1_31F2 |
English Survey, Advanced and Honors, Grade 10 |
60 |
1_31F3 |
English Survey, Advanced and Honors, Grade 11 |
61 |
1_31F4 |
English Survey, Advanced and Honors, Grade 12 |
62 |
1_31G |
English Survey, AP/IB |
63 |
1_32 |
Literature |
64 |
1_33 |
Composition and Writing |
65 |
1_34 |
Speech |
66 |
1_35 |
English as a Second Language |
67 |
1_41A |
American History, Basic |
68 |
1_41B |
American History, Regular |
69 |
1_41C |
American History, Advanced and Honors |
70 |
1_41D |
American History, Specialized Topics |
71 |
1_41E |
American History, AP/IB |
72 |
1_42A |
World History, Basic |
73 |
1_42B |
World History, Regular |
74 |
1_42C |
World History, Advanced and Honors |
75 |
1_42D |
World History, Specialized Topics |
76 |
1_42E |
World History, AP/IB |
77 |
1_43A |
Government & Politics, Basic |
78 |
1_43B |
Government & Politics, Regular |
79 |
1_43C |
Government & Politics, Advanced and Honors |
80 |
1_43D |
Government & Politics, Specialized Topics |
81 |
1_43E |
Government & Politics, AP/IB |
82 |
1_44A |
Economics, Basic |
83 |
1_44B |
Economics, Regular |
84 |
1_44C |
Economics, Advanced and Honors |
85 |
1_44D |
Economics, Specialized Topics |
86 |
1_44E |
Economics, AP/IB |
87 |
1_45A |
Behavioral Sciences, Basic |
88 |
1_45B |
Behavioral Sciences, Regular |
89 |
1_45C |
Behavioral Sciences, Advanced and Honors |
90 |
1_45D |
Behavioral Sciences, Specialized Topics |
91 |
1_45E |
Behavioral Sciences, AP/IB |
92 |
1_46A |
Geography, Basic |
93 |
1_46B |
Geography, Regular |
94 |
1_46C |
Geography, Advanced and Honors |
95 |
1_46D |
Geography, Specialized Topics |
96 |
1_46E |
Geography, AP/IB |
97 |
1_47A |
Social Science, Humanities, and Other, Basic |
98 |
1_47B |
Social Science, Humanities, and Other, Regular |
99 |
1_47C |
Social Science, Humanities, and Other, Advanced and Honors |
100 |
1_47D |
Social Science, Humanities, and Other, Specialized Topics |
101 |
1_47E |
Social Science, Humanities, and Other, AP/IB |
102 |
1_51A |
Visual Arts, Basic |
103 |
1_51B |
Visual Arts, Regular and Advanced |
104 |
1_51C |
Visual Arts, AP/IB |
105 |
1_52A |
Music, Basic |
106 |
1_52B |
Music, Regular and Advanced |
107 |
1_52C |
Music, AP/IB |
108 |
1_53 |
Dance |
109 |
1_54 |
Theater Arts |
110 |
1_61A |
Spanish, Year 1 |
111 |
1_61B |
Spanish, Year 2 |
112 |
1_61C |
Spanish, Year 3 |
113 |
1_61D |
Spanish, Year 4+ |
114 |
1_61E |
Spanish, AP/IB |
115 |
1_62A |
French, Year 1 |
116 |
1_62B |
French, Year 2 |
117 |
1_62C |
French, Year 3 |
118 |
1_62D |
French, Year 4+ |
119 |
1_62E |
French, AP/IB |
120 |
1_63A |
German, Year 1 |
121 |
1_63B |
German, Year 2 |
122 |
1_63C |
German, Year 3 |
123 |
1_63D |
German, Year 4+ |
124 |
1_63E |
German, AP/IB |
125 |
1_64A |
Latin, Year 1 |
126 |
1_64B |
Latin, Year 2 |
127 |
1_64C |
Latin, Year 3 |
128 |
1_64D |
Latin, Year 4+ |
129 |
1_64E |
Latin, AP/IB |
130 |
1_65A |
Italian, Year 1 |
131 |
1_65B |
Italian, Year 2 |
132 |
1_65C |
Italian, Year 3 |
133 |
1_65D |
Italian, Year 4+ |
134 |
1_65E |
Italian, AP/IB |
135 |
1_66A |
Non-English Language Other, Year 1 |
136 |
1_66B |
Non-English Language Other, Year 2 |
137 |
1_66C |
Non-English Language Other, Year 3 |
138 |
1_66D |
Non-English Language Other, Year 4+ |
139 |
1_66E |
Non-English Language Other, AP/IB |
140 |
1_67 |
Non-English Languages General/Survey |
141 |
2_AA |
Family and Consumer Sciences Education, 1st course |
142 |
2_AB |
Family and Consumer Sciences Education, 2nd (or later) courses |
143 |
2_AC |
Family and Consumer Sciences Education, Specialty courses |
144 |
2_B1 |
GLMP, Basic Keyboarding/Typewriting |
145 |
2_B2 |
GLMP, Industrial Arts |
146 |
2_B3 |
GLMP, Career Preparation/General Work Experience |
147 |
2_B4 |
GLMP, Technology Education |
148 |
2_B5 |
GLMP, Other |
149 |
2_C01A |
Agriculture and Renewable Resources, 1st course |
150 |
2_C01B |
Agriculture and Renewable Resources, 2nd (or later) courses |
151 |
2_C01C |
Agriculture and Renewable Resources, Specialty courses |
152 |
2_C01D |
Agriculture and Renewable Resources, Co-op/Work Experience |
153 |
2_C021A |
Business Management, 1st course |
154 |
2_C021B |
Business Management, 2nd (or later) courses |
155 |
2_C021C |
Business Management, Specialty courses |
156 |
2_C021D |
Business Management, Co-op/Work Experience |
157 |
2_C022A |
Business Services, 1st course |
158 |
2_C022B |
Business Services, 2nd (or later) courses |
159 |
2_C022C |
Business Services, Specialty courses |
160 |
2_C022D |
Business Services, Co-op/Work Experience |
161 |
2_C03A |
Marketing and Distribution, 1st course |
162 |
2_C03B |
Marketing and Distribution, 2nd (or later) courses |
163 |
2_C03C |
Marketing and Distribution, Specialty courses |
164 |
2_C03D |
Marketing and Distribution, Co-op/Work Experience |
165 |
2_C04A |
Health Care, 1st course |
166 |
2_C04B |
Health Care, 2nd (or later) courses |
167 |
2_C04C |
Health Care, Specialty courses |
168 |
2_C04D |
Health Care, Co-op/Work Experience |
169 |
2_C05A |
Public and Protective Services, 1st course |
170 |
2_C05B |
Public and Protective Services, 2nd (or later) courses |
171 |
2_C05C |
Public and Protective Services, Specialty courses |
172 |
2_C05D |
Public and Protective Services, Co-op/Work Experience |
173 |
2_C061A |
T&I, Construction Trades, 1st course |
174 |
2_C061B |
T&I, Construction Trades, 2nd (or later) courses |
175 |
2_C061C |
T&I, Construction Trades, Specialty courses |
176 |
2_C061D |
T&I, Construction Trades, Co-op/Work Experience |
177 |
2_C062A |
T&I, Mechanics and Repair, 1st course |
178 |
2_C062B |
T&I, Mechanics and Repair, 2nd (or later) courses |
179 |
2_C062C |
T&I, Mechanics and Repair, Specialty courses |
180 |
2_C062D |
T&I, Mechanics and Repair, Co-op/Work Experience |
181 |
2_C0631A |
T&I, Precision Production (Drafting/Graphics/Printing), 1st course |
182 |
2_C0631B |
T&I, Precision Production (Drafting/Graphics/Printing), 2nd (or later) courses |
183 |
2_C0631C |
T&I, Precision Production (Drafting/Graphics/Printing), Specialty courses |
184 |
2_C0632A |
T&I, Precision Production (Metals/Wood/Plastics), 1st course |
185 |
2_C0632B |
T&I, Precision Production (Metals/Wood/Plastics), 2nd (or later) courses |
186 |
2_C0632C |
T&I, Precision Production (Metals/Wood/Plastics), Specialty courses |
187 |
2_C0633A |
T&I, Precision Production (Other), 1st course |
188 |
2_C0633B |
T&I, Precision Production (Other), 2nd (or later) courses |
189 |
2_C0633C |
T&I, Precision Production (Other), Specialty courses |
190 |
2_C0634 |
T&I, Precision Production, Co-op/Work Experience |
191 |
2_C064A |
T&I, Transportation and Material Moving, 1st course |
192 |
2_C064B |
T&I, Transportation and Material Moving, 2nd (or later) courses |
193 |
2_C064C |
T&I, Transportation and Material Moving, Specialty courses |
194 |
2_C064D |
T&I, Transportation and Material Moving, Co-op/Work Experience |
195 |
2_C071A |
Computer Technology, 1st course |
196 |
2_C071BA |
Computer Technology, 2nd (or later) courses, non-AP/IB |
197 |
2_C071BB |
Computer Technology, 2nd (or later) courses, AP/IB |
198 |
2_C071C |
Computer Technology, Specialty courses |
199 |
2_C071D |
Computer Technology, Co-op/Work Experience |
200 |
2_C072A |
Communication Technology, 1st course |
201 |
2_C072B |
Communication Technology, 2nd (or later) courses |
202 |
2_C072C |
Communication Technology, Specialty courses |
203 |
2_C072D |
Communication Technology, Co-op/Work Experience |
204 |
2_C073A |
Other Technologies, 1st course |
205 |
2_C073B |
Other Technologies, 2nd (or later) courses |
206 |
2_C073C |
Other Technologies, Specialty courses |
207 |
2_C073D |
Other Technologies, Co-op/Work Experience |
208 |
2_C08A |
Personal and Other Services, 1st course |
209 |
2_C08B |
Personal and Other Services, 2nd (or later) courses |
210 |
2_C08C |
Personal and Other Services, Specialty courses |
211 |
2_C08D |
Personal and Other Services, Co-op/Work Experience |
212 |
2_C09A |
Food Service and Hospitality, 1st course |
213 |
2_C09B |
Food Service and Hospitality, 2nd (or later) courses |
214 |
2_C09C |
Food Service and Hospitality, Specialty courses |
215 |
2_C09D |
Food Service and Hospitality, Co-op/Work Experience |
216 |
2_C10A |
Child Care and Education, 1st course |
217 |
2_C10B |
Child Care and Education, 2nd (or later) courses |
218 |
2_C10C |
Child Care and Education, Specialty courses |
219 |
2_C10D |
Child Care and Education, Co-op/Work Experience |
220 |
2_C11 |
Specific Labor Market Preparation, Unidentified Subject |
221 |
3_1A |
Enrichment |
222 |
3_1B |
Assistance |
223 |
3_1C |
Service |
224 |
3_2 |
Health, Physical & Recreational Education Credits |
225 |
3_3 |
Religion and Theology Credits |
226 |
3_4 |
Military Science Credits |
227 |
4 |
Special Education Curriculum |
228 |
5_5 |
Supervisor verification requested |
The NLSY97 High School Transcript variables include credits earned for completed coursework as reported by the school submitting the transcript. Because credit systems vary considerably across schools, researchers may find it useful to use a transformation into Carnegie credit units, which are comparable across schools. One Carnegie credit is defined as the credits earned for a class that meets every day for one period for an entire school year. An NLSY97 Transcript Survey respondent's primary school is the school submitting the transcript record for processing; for the majority of transcript records processed, this is the last high school attended reporting coursework for the student. The effort to standardize course credits is based on the number of school course credits equal to one Carnegie credit as reported at the primary school. A multiplier was identified at the school level and applied to all school-based credits, creating a standardized credit system.
Carnegie credit conversion method
The conversion of school-based course credits into a standardized Carnegie unit was established through three distinct approaches at the primary school level:
- Identify Carnegie unit equivalent credits directly reported by the school
- Establish a Carnegie credit equivalent measure through credits earned for an entire year of English coursework, directly reported by the school.
- If a school did not directly report the relationship between English coursework and credits earned for one school year, observe patterns of English Survey and other English credits earned over an entire school year within the transcript record.
A standardized Carnegie credit measure was created through observation of school credits earned for coursework routinely taken over a full school year. Review of the transcript survey data indicates that English coursework is most often repeated over a year for the student's entire high school career, allowing a close approximation of the number of school-based credits earned over one full school year. If a school could not provide a Carnegie credit equivalent measure for school credits, the school was asked to provide the number of school credits a student earns for completion of English coursework across an entire school year.
Standardized Carnegie Credits Based on School Reports. Initial transcript requests at schools did not include a series of questions regarding Carnegie equivalent credits. While recontacting schools during the 2004 wave, specific effort was made to define school credits earned in terms of Carnegie credits. Data processing clerks also reviewed course catalog materials submitted and identified schools with Carnegie Unit conversions reported or English credits earned by school year. In total, approximately 90% (n = 5,583) of the student transcripts submitted by primary schools either reported Carnegie equivalent credits or provided the number of English credits earned over one school year. The school-based reports were used to create a multiplier directly applied to course credits noted below.
School Reported Carnegie Credit Equivalencies. When a school provided the number of school course credits equal to one Carnegie credit unit, a credit multiplier was built based on the ratio: X school-based credits = 1 Carnegie credit unit. This multiplier was associated with the primary school. For student records associated with the primary school, the multiplier was applied to each course credit and captured in the CRS_CARNEGIE_CREDIT.xxx variable. The recode flag was set to 1 in each instance (see Table 5).
Standardized Carnegie Credits Based on School Reported English Credits. If a school provided the number of school-based credits earned for one full school year's English coursework, a credit multiplier was built based on the ratio: X English Credits Earned for One School Year = 1 Carnegie credit unit. This comparison was built on the underlying assumption that the number of school-based credits earned for English coursework completed over one school year was equivalent to one Carnegie credit unit. The multiplier was associated with the primary school. For student records associated with the primary school, the multiplier was applied to each course credit and captured in the CRS_CARNEGIE_CREDIT.xxx variable. The recode flag was set to 2 in each instance (see Table 5).
Standardized Carnegie Credits Based on Transcript Observations. For the remaining 10% of student records, a standard Carnegie credit equivalent was constructed by observing credit patterns across schools within transcript records. Again, English coursework was targeted as such coursework was more likely to be repeated across school years and have similar curriculum. Course credit patterns were first observed in English Survey coursework (1_31E*). If a credit pattern could not be detected, the program was expanded to observe a pattern across all English coursework (1_3*).
Standardized Carnegie Credits Based on English Survey Credits within Transcripts. Programs were built to observe English Survey course credit patterns across school years (where course codes = 1_31E*). Course credits were summed across school years to create a multiplier based on the ratio (X English Survey credits for 1 school year = 1 Carnegie credit unit). The multiplier was associated with the primary school. For student records associated with the primary school, the multiplier was applied to each course credit and captured in the CRS_CARNEGIE_CREDIT.xxx variable. The recode flag was set to 3 in each instance (see Table 5).
Standardized Carnegie Credits Based on Other English Credits within Transcripts. Programs were built to observe English course credit patterns across school years (where course codes = 1_3*). Course credits were summed across school years to create a multiplier based on the ratio (X English credits for one school year = 1 Carnegie credit unit). The multiplier was associated with the primary school. For student records associated with the primary school, the multiplier was applied to each course credit and captured in the CRS_CARNEGIE_CREDIT.xxx variable. The recode flag was set to 4 in each instance (see Table 5).
Unclassifiable Credits. In few instances, a credit system across schools could not be observed from reviewing English coursework credits earned. Reasons for not classifying school-based credits into a Carnegie credit equivalency include: credits were not reported (i.e., "missing") at the course level, zero credits were earned for all courses reported, not enough credits were reported to establish a Carnegie multiplier, and credits reported varied enough to prevent a standardized multiplier across student records. In such instances, CRS_CARNEGIE_CREDIT.xxx was set to a missing value (-3) and the recode flag was set to 5 (see Table 5).
Carnegie Unit Recode Flag |
Recoding Status |
---|---|
1 |
Directly recoded using school-reported Carnegie Units. |
2 |
Recoded using multiplier developed from school-reported English credits earned in one school year. |
3 |
Recoded using standardized multiplier observed in English Survey credits. |
4 |
Recoded using standardized multiplier observed in English coursework, other. |
5 |
Unclassifiable credits |
Additional notes regarding the Carnegie credit assignment
Quality control checks were developed to evaluate the procedures using school-based credits earned for one year of English coursework in calculating a standard Carnegie multiplier. The three standardized calculations using English course credits were tested on the schools with direct Carnegie credit conversions reported. In addition, staff reviewed the total number of Carnegie credits earned by student to determine if the Carnegie credits reported seem reasonable. A range of 16 - 24 Carnegie credits earned for academic coursework was benchmarked. While a large majority fall within this range of credits, there are still outliers. Some reasons for these outliers are noted below.
Primary Schools and Credits Earned at Other/"Transfer" Schools. One key assumption is that the primary school calculated credits earned for coursework taken at other ("transfer") schools based on the primary school's credit system required for graduation. This assumption proved true in most cases, as the primary school would adjust the transferable credits from other schools into meaningful credits necessary to graduate. In some instances, however, it is clear that the conversion of credits earned at prior schools into equivalent credits at the primary school did not occur. When possible, a conversion based on English coursework observed across the transfer schools was used to standardize the credits across both schools. In the remaining instances, it was determined that a standardized set of Carnegie credits could not be established based on the information presented, and Carnegie credits for these transcripts were coded as unclassifiable. The CRS_CARNEGIE_RECODE.xxx variables indicate what steps were taken for each individual course.
Course Credit Reporting and Data Entry Errors. If a clear entry or reporting error was identified for a particular course credit (often a missing decimal point) and a correction could be identified from reviewing other course credits earned or total credits reported by term, the Carnegie credit reported in the data file was constructed to reflect the adjusted credit earned, rather than using the apparently erroneous course credit value. Approximately 100 courses were affected by these types of corrections. The original credit information remains in the CRS_CREDIT.xx variable series.
Grades 7 and 8. Student transcripts with high numbers of Carnegie credits often include grade levels outside of the typical grades 9-12 high school career. A number of district level transcripts report middle school and high school coursework. Coursework taken in grades 7 and 8 was assigned a Carnegie credit equivalent. Researchers can use the grade level variables in order to exclude these courses (and credits) from specific analyses as appropriate.
Vocational and Enrichment Coursework Credits. It is apparent from review of the transcript records that many schools apply a different credit weighting system to certain types of vocational coursework (where R-SST = 2_*) and enrichment coursework (where R-SST = 3_*) than to academic level coursework (where SST = 1_*). While Carnegie credits have been calculated for these vocational and enrichment courses, users should note the credits earned for vocational and enrichment courses inflate the total number of Carnegie credits earned for some transcripts.
These variables categorize as academic or vocational a student's full coursetaking behavior in high school. The variables follow recommendations set forth in U.S. Department of Education. National Center for Education Statistics. "Procedures Guide for Transcript Studies" Working Paper 1999-05, by Martha Naomi Alt and Denise Bradby. Project Officer, Denise Nelson. Washington, D.C.:1999. (For an explanation of the course codes [e.g., 1_31*], see Coding Information for Course Code Variables section above.)
Academic specialist (question name: TRANS_ACAD_SPEC)
- Student earned at least 4 credits in English (1_31* 1_32 1_33 1_34);
- at least 3 credits in mathematics at the Algebra 1 level or higher (1_14 1_15 1_16 1_17*);
- at least 2 credits in biology, chemistry, or physics (1_22* 1_23* 1_24*);
- at least 2 credits in social studies (1_41* 1_42* 1_43* 1_44* 1_45* 1_46* 1_47*) with at least 1 credit in US or world history (1_41* 1_42*);
- at least 2 credits in a single foreign language (1_61* 1_62* 1_63* 1_64* 1_65* 1_66*).
Academic concentrator (question name: TRANS_ACAD_CONC)
- Student earned at least 4 credits in English (1_31* 1_32 1_33 1_34);
- at least 3 credits in mathematics (1_11* 1_12* 1_13 1_14 1_15 1_16 1_17* 1_18 1_19*);
- at least 3 credits in science (1_21* 1_22 1_23 1_24* 1_25* 1_26*);
- at least 3 credits in social studies 1_41* 1_42* 1_43* 1_44* 1_45* 1_46* 1_47*).
Vocational specialist (question name: TRANS_VOC_SPEC)
- Student earned at least 4 credits in a single Specific Labor Market Preparation (SMLP) vocational area (2_C*), with at least 2 of these credits in that SLMP's 2nd-level or higher courses or co-op/work experience coursework (2_C*B 2_C*C 2_C*D 2_C11 2_C071BA).
Vocational concentrator (question name: TRANS_VOC_CONC)
- Student earned at least 3 credits total in a single Specific Labor Market Preparation (SLMP) vocational area (2_C*).
School program (question name: TRANS_SCH_PGM)
- The "School Program" variable combines the information from the four variables above. This variable is coded as follows:
- Academic specialist (and not vocational concentrator)
- Vocational concentrator (and not academic specialist)
- Both academic specialist and vocational concentrator
- Neither academic specialist nor vocational concentrator
Subject-area pipeline variables were modelled closely on the standards established in NCES Working Paper No. 2003-01 for categorization of mathematics, foreigh language, and science course-taking. Some changes in procedure were necessary because of our use of the R-SST course-coding scheme; these are noted in the appropriate sections below. (For an explanation of the course codes [e.g., 1_31*], see Coding Information for Course Code Variables section above.)
Mathematics Pipeline (question name: TRANS_MATHPIPE)
Code |
Description |
---|---|
100 |
No math. No recorded high-school math courses. |
200 |
Non-academic. Highest course was 1_11*, 1_12*, or 1_19*. |
300 |
Low academic Students whose highest-level math course was 1_13. |
400 |
Middle academic 1. Highest course was 1_14, 1_15, or 1_18 (Unified math, two or fewer years). |
500 |
Middle academic 2. Students whose highest math achievement was one or fewer Carnegie credits in math courses coded 1_16 (Algebra 2 through Pre-Calculus; Trig and Advanced Math) OR three years of 1_18 (Unified Math). |
600 |
Advanced academic 1. Students whose highest math achievement was more than one credit in math courses coded 1_16 (Algebra 2 through Pre-Calculus; Trig and Advanced Math). |
700 |
Advanced academic 2. Highest course was 1_17C. |
800 |
Advanced academic 3. Highest course was 1_17A or 1_17B. |
The division between students with one or fewer credits in course-code 1_16 and those with more than one credit was made in order to adapt the R-SST course-coding scheme to the 8-category math pipeline standard established in NCES 2003-01.
Sciences
Life Sciences Pipeline (question name: TRANS_BIOPIPE)
Code |
Description |
---|---|
0 |
None. No credits in any high-school life sciences (1_22*). |
100 |
Basic Biology 1. Highest course was 1_22A. |
200 |
General Biology 1. Highest course was 1_22B. |
300 |
Secondary Life Sciences. Highest course was 1_22D. |
400 |
Honors & General Biology 2. Highest course was 1_22C. |
500 |
Advanced. Highest course was 1_22E. |
Chemistry Pipeline (question name: TRANS_CHEMPIPE)
Code |
Description |
---|---|
0 |
None. No credits in high-school chemistry (1_23*). |
100 |
Intro or Consumer Chemistry. Highest course was 1_23A. |
200 |
Chemistry 1. Highest course was 1_23B. |
300 |
Chemistry 2. Highest course was 1_23C, D, or E. |
Physics Pipeline (question name: TRANS_PHYSICS_PIPE)
Code |
Description |
---|---|
0 |
None. No credits in high-school physics (1_24*). |
100 |
General Physics. Highest course was 1_24A. |
200 |
Physics 1. Highest course was 1_24B. |
300 |
Physics 2. Highest course was 1_24C or E. |
(For 1_24D, see Physical Sciences Pipeline.)
Physical Sciences Pipeline (question name: PHYS_SCI_PIPE)
Code |
Description |
---|---|
0 |
None. No credits in high-school physical sciences (not physics). |
100 |
Physical Sciences, Applied Physical Sciences, Earth Science, College Prep Earth Science, or Unified Science. Highest course was 1_25A-B, 1_26A-B, or 1_21A-C. |
200 |
Astronomy, Environmental Sci, Geology, or Oceanography. Highest course was 1_24D, 1_25C-D, or 1_26C-D. |
Overall Physical Sciences Pipeline (question name: TRANS_OPS_PIPE)
Code |
Description |
---|---|
0 |
None. No credits in high-school physics or physical sciences. |
100 |
Primary Physical Science. Physical Sciences Pipeline = 1. |
200 |
Secondary Physical Science. Physical Sciences Pipeline=2 or Chemistry Pipeline=1 or Physics Pipeline=1. |
300 |
Chemistry 1 or Physics 1. Chemistry Pipeline=2 or Physics Pipeline=2. |
400 |
Chemistry 1 and Physics 1. Chemistry Pipeline=2 and Physics Pipeline=2. |
500 |
Chemistry 2 or Physics 2. Chemistry Pipeline=3 or Physics Pipeline=3. |
Life Sciences and Physical Sciences Pipeline (question name: TRANS_SCI_PIPE)
Code |
Description |
---|---|
0 |
None. No credits in high-school science. |
100 |
Primary Physical Science. Overall Physical Sciences Pipeline=1. |
200 |
Secondary Physical Science or Basic Biology. Overall Physical Sciences Pipeline=2 or Life Sciences Pipeline=1. |
300 |
General Biology 1 or Secondary Biology or Honors & General Biology 2 or Advanced Biology. Life Sciences Pipeline >= 2. |
400 |
Chemistry 1 or Physics 1. Overall Physical Sciences Pipeline=3. |
500 |
Chemistry 1 & Physics 1. Overall Physical Sciences Pipeline=4. |
600 |
Chemistry 2 or Physics 2. Overall Physical Sciences Pipeline=5. |
Foreign languages
The foreign language variables are as follows:
Variable |
Description |
---|---|
TRANS_SPANPIPE | Progress in Spanish |
TRANS_FRCHPIPE | Progress in French |
TRANS_GERMPIPE | Progress in German |
TRANS_LATPIPE | Progress in Latin |
TRANS_ITALPIPE | Progress in Italian |
TRANS_OTHLANGPIPE | Progress in other foreign language |
TRANS_LANGPIPE_1 | Progress in First Language Attempted |
TRANS_LANGPIPE_2 | Progress in Second Language Attempted |
TRANS_LANGPIPE_3 | Progress in Third Language Attempted |
All foreign language pipline variables are coded using the following coding scheme:
Code |
Description |
---|---|
0 |
Attempted, no progress. |
50 |
Completed .5 units, Year 1. |
100 |
Completed 1 unit, Year 1. |
150 |
Completed .5 units, Year 2. |
200 |
Completed 1 unit, Year 2. |
250 |
Completed .5 units, Year 3. |
300 |
Completed 1 unit, Year 3. |
350 |
Completed .5 units, Year 4. |
400 |
Completed 1 unit, Year 4. |
450 |
Completed .5 units, AP/IB. |
500 |
Completed 1 unit, AP/IB. |
9900 |
Never attempted language. |
The 0 category includes students with pre-high-school foreign-language coursework but none in high school.
Number of Languages Attempted (question name: TRANS_FRN_LANG_ATMPT)
All recorded high-school coursework in any foreign language (1_61* through 1_66*) was included in this measure, with any number of credits or none, and counting all courses coded 1_66* (Foreign Language, Other) collectively as 1 language attempted . The range in our data is from 0 to 4 languages.
Credits by Academic Year, academic/vocational
Summary credits variables sum Carnegie credits (TRANS_CRS_CARNEGIE_CREDIT.xxx) over the relevant course codes or time period. Total credits variables are assigned to reserved codes for three classes of students: those with only pre-high school coursework; those with no relevant courses; and those who had relevant courses, but no valid Carnegie credits associated with those courses. Question names for these variables are as follows:
Variable |
Description |
---|---|
TRANS_ACAD_CRD_XXYY | Academic Credits Academic Year XX-YY |
TRANS_AC_VOC_CRD_XXYY | Academic and Vocational Credits Acad Yr XX-YY |
TRANS_ACAD_CRDS_TOT | Academic Credits-All |
TRANS_AC_VOC_CRDS_TOT | Academic and Vocational Credits--All |
TRANS_PCT_ADV_CRDS | Percentage of Credits from Advance Coursework |
TRANS_TOT_MATH | Total Math Credits |
TRANS_TOT_ACA_MATH | Total Academic Math Credits |
TRANS_TOT_ACA_NONLO_MATH | Total Non-Low Academic Math Credits |
TRANS_TOT_ADV_MATH | Total Advanced Math Credits |
TRANS_TOT_FL_CRDS | Total Foreign Languages Credits |
Course codes for these variables are classified as follows (for an explanation of the course codes [e.g., 1_31*], see Coding Information for Course Code Variables section above):
Credit Variable |
Course Code |
---|---|
Academic | 1_*. |
Academic and Vocational | 1_* or 2_*. |
Advanced | 1_17* 1_22C 1_22E 1_23C 1_23E 1_24C 1_24E 1_25C 1_26C 1_31F1 1_31F2 1_31F3 1_31F4 1_31G 1_41C 1_41E q_42C 1_42E 1_43C 1_43E 1_44C 1_44E 1_45C 1_45E 1_46C 1_46E 1_47C 1_47E 1_51C 1_52C 1_61E 1_62E 1_63E 1_64E 1_65E 1_66E as a fraction of total Carnegie credits. |
Math | 1_11* 1_12* 1_13 1_14 1_15 1_16 1_17* 1_18 1_19* |
Academic math | 1_13 1_14 1_15 1_16 1_17* 1_18 |
Non-Low academic math | 1_14 1_15 1_16 1_17A 1_17B 1_17C 1_18 |
Advanced math | 1_16 1_17* |
Foreign Language | 1_61* 1_62* 1_63* 1_64* 1_65* 1_66*. |
Cumulative Credits by Academic Year (question name: TRANS_CUM_CRDS_EARNED_XXYY)
These variables sum the Carnegie credits earned by each student over the course of his/her high school career as of the end of each academic year. The variable has valid values for every academic year from when the student first reported high school coursework, to when the student last reported high school coursework, including interim years (if any) in which no coursework was reported.
Terms were assigned to an academic year primarily by a series of rules using information contained in the variables TERMSEAS, TERMYEAR, TRMSTRMO, TRMSTRYR, TRMENDMO, and TRMENDYR. For example, a Fall term beginning in September of 1999 would be assigned to the 1999-2000 academic year. However, start and end dates are often either missing or inaccurate, so there was extensive re-coding of academic year based on the entire sequence of terms included in the transcript, with reference to the GRLEVEL and CRSCODE variables as necessary. Summer terms were included with the previous academic year; thus, courses taken in Summer 1999 were coded as belonging to the 1998-1999 academic year.
Cumulative Percentage of New Basics requirements fulfilled by Academic Year (question name: TRANS_PCT_NB_EARNED_XXYY)
The New Basics curriculum is a minimum curriculum recommended by the National Commission of Excellence in Education (NCEE) in 1983 to be completed by high school graduates. These variables represent the cumulative percentage of New Basics Core requirements completed by each student.
New Basics Core Requirements
- English- 4 credits (1_3*)
- Math- 3 credits (1_1*)
- Science- 3 credits (1_2*)
- Social Science- 3 credits (1_4*)
- Computer Science- 0.5 credits (2_C071*)
The Carnegie credits earned for courses fulfilling New Basics requirements were summed by subject area over each academic year, and the cumulative percentage of Core New Basics requirements completed was calculated. Percentages were capped at 100, so that students exceeding requirements would show 100% fulfillment. Users may refer to National Center for Education Statistics publications for additional information on the New Basics curriculum.
Grade Level by Academic Year (question name: TRANS_GRD_LV_XXYY)
These variables report the student's grade level for each academic year we have course work reported for them. In some cases, there were two or more grade levels reported for a single academic year. In these cases, the academic year grade level is set to the grade level associated with the highest number of credits. In most cases, this is also the highest grade level reported during that academic year. Summer terms (and their associated grade levels) were excluded from this construction.
Coursework Reported by Academic Year (question name: TRANS_CRSWRK_IN_XXYY)
After the assignment of terms to academic years (see the section Cumulative Credits by Academic Year for an explanation of this process) we recorded for each student the academic years in which any coursework was reported for that student. Academic years in which only pre-high-school coursework was reported are assigned a reserved code; an academic year which contained a mixture of high-school and pre-high-school coursework (often because of high school work pursued during the summer after 8th grade) was coded as having valid coursework reported.
Credit-Weighted Grade Point Averages (question names: TRANS_CRD_GPA_OVERALL and TRANS_CRD_GPA_YR_XXYY)
These variables indicate grade point averages on a 4 point grading scale. For each course, the quality grade (TRANS_CRS_GRADE.xxx) is weighted by Carnegie credits (TRANS_CRS_CARNEGIE_CREDIT.xxx). Quality grades were recoded as follows: 1 = 4.3, 2=4.0, 3=3.7, 4=3.3, 5=3.0, 6=2.7, 7=2.3, 8=2.0, 9=1.7, 10=1.3, 11=1.0, 12=0.7, 13=0.0, all other values recoded to missing. Overall and Academic Year variables include all courses.
Subject variables are defined as follows:
Credit Weighted GPA Coursework |
Question Name |
Course Code |
---|---|---|
English | TRANS_CRD_GPA_ENGLISH | 1_31* 1_32 1_33 1_34 |
Foreign Language | TRANS_CRD_GPA_FGN_LANG | 1_61* 1_62* 1_63* 1_64* 1_65* 1_66* |
Social Science | TRANS_CRD_GPA_SOC_SCI | 1_41* 1_42* 1_43* 1_44* 1_45* 1_46* 1_47* |
Mathematics | TRANS_CRD_GPA_MATH | 1_11* 1_12* 1_13 1_14 1_15 1_16 1_17* 1_18 1_19* |
Life and Physical Sciences | TRANS_CRD_GPA_LP_SCI | 1_21* 1_22* 1_23* 1_24* 1_25* 1_26* |
Transcript Survey variables can be found in the NLSY97 data set by browsing through the "transcript survey" area of interest or by searching for question names with the prefix TRANS_. This section provides supplemental notes not included in the codebook about individual transcript variables.
Question Name (all begin with TRANS_) and Reference Number(s) |
Variable Title and Notes |
---|---|
CRS_CODE.xx R97128.-R97251. |
Course Code xx Courses are numbered approximately as they appeared on the high school transcript. The course number has no content except to identify the course uniquely. Because terms are numbered approximately chronologically, course numbers and term numbers may not increase in tandem. Information on the Secondary School Taxonomy - Revised (SST-R) is available on the National Center for Education Statistics website, http://nces.ed.gov. Note: Researchers must use the crosswalk provided in the Coding Information for Course Code Variables section above to compare the NLSY97 course codes to the SST-R. |
CRS_CREDIT.xx R97252.-R97375. |
Credits Earned for Course xx Credits earned are listed in the units provided by the school and are not necessarily comparable across schools. Some schools may award 1 credit for a one-year course, while others award credits according to the number of hours per week that the course meets. Course credits within a term may not sum to the credits earned for the term due to additional credits from non-coursework activities (e.g., community service, yearbook, etc.), or because of credit accumulation rules that involve multiple courses. For example, all religion courses may be worth .5 credits, but a student may face a ceiling of 2 credits earned from religion courses across all high school terms. |
CRS_GRADE_RECODE_STATUS.xx R97376.-R97499. |
Recoding Status of Grade for Course xx See "Course Grades" discussion under Data Entry and Processing above. |
CRS_GRADE.xx R97500.-R97623. |
Recoded Quality Grade xx See "Course Grades" discussion under Data Entry and Processing above. |
CRS_TERM_NU.xx R97624.-R97747. |
Course Term Number xx Because terms are numbered approximately chronologically while courses are numbered approximately as they appeared on the transcript, course numbers and term numbers may not increase in tandem. The term number has no content except to identify the term uniquely. |
TERM_CREDIT.xx R97748.-R97765. |
Credits Earned in Term xx Credits earned are listed in the units provided by the school and are not necessarily comparable across schools. Some schools may award 1 credit for a one-year course, while others award credits according to the number of hours per week that the course meets. Course credits within a term may not sum to the credits earned for the term due to additional credits from non-coursework activities (e.g., community service, yearbook, etc.), or because of credit accumulation rules that involve multiple courses. For example, all religion courses may be worth .5 credits, but a student may face a ceiling of 2 credits earned from religion courses across all high school terms. |
TERM_START_DATE.xx R97856.-R97873.01 |
Month, Year Term Started xx Calendar month and year listed on transcript for start of term. If only one date was associated with a term and a start or end date could not be determined, that date appears in TERM_END_DATE.xx. Term dates may overlap if a youth transferred from one school to another mid-session, or in rare cases, with simultaneous enrollment in a vocational school, alternative school program or community college. |
TERM_END_DATE.xx R97766.-R97783.01 |
Month, Year Term Ended xx Calendar month and year listed on transcript for end of term. If only one date was associated with a term and a start or end date could not be determined, that date appears as the end date. Term dates may overlap if a youth transferred from one school to another mid-session, or in rare cases, with simultaneous enrollment in a vocational school, alternative school program or community college. |
TERM_GRADE.xx R97784.-R97801. |
Grade Level for Term xx The grade level (e.g., 10, 11, etc.) in which the youth was enrolled during term xx. |
TERM_SCH_NU.xx R97802.-R97819. |
School Number for Term xx The ID of the school in which the youth was enrolled in term xx. Corresponds only to variables SCH_CAT.xx and not to other school IDs in the NLSY97 youth data. School number 01 indicates the school from which the transcript was received. A school number greater than 01 indicates transferred coursework. |
TERM_SEASON.xx R97820.-R97837. |
Term Season xx Calendar season or other term designation of term xx. Note, when the term structure did not correspond to a season, a term type designation was assigned to maintain a chronological progression. |
TERM_YEAR.xx R97838.-R97855.01 |
Term Year xx Calendar year of term xx designation. May not match TERM_END_DATE.xx or TERM_START_DATE.xx, as in Fall 2000 term ending in January 2001. |
SCH_CAT.xx R97874.-R97885. |
Course Catalog Received xx Marked 'yes' if a course catalog was available from the school during the course coding process. May indicate higher reliability of SST-R code assigned in CRS_CODE.xx. Can be linked to CRS_CODE.xx through term number of course (CRS_TERM_NU.xx) and school number of term (TERM_SCH_NU.xx). School numbers link only to TERM_SCH_NU.xx variable and not to other school IDs in the NLSY97 youth data. School number 01 indicates the school from which the transcript was received, generally the most recent school of enrollment. A school number greater than 01 indicates transferred coursework. |
SPECIAL_ED R97886. |
Participated in Special Ed Marked yes if sampled school indicated on Student Request list that youth was enrolled in special education courses. Pertains to School 01. |
BILING_ED R97887. |
Participated in Bilingual Ed Marked yes if sampled school indicated on Student Request list that youth was enrolled in bilingual education courses. Pertains to School 01. |
GIFTED_CRS R97888. |
Participated in Gifted Courses Program Marked yes if sampled school indicated on Student Request list that youth was enrolled in a gifted courses program. Pertains to School 01. |
TERM_TOTAL R97889. |
Total Number of Terms Reported Total number of terms reported for youth across all schools. Equal to the maximum xx for which TERM_xx variables will have non-missing data. |
SCH_START_DATE R97890.-R97890.01 |
Month, Year Enrollment at School Started Calendar month and year in which school shows student as first enrolled. Pertains to School 01. |
SCH_END_DATE R97891.-R97891.01 |
Month, Year Enrollment at School Ended Calendar month and year in which school shows student as last enrolled. Pertains to School 01. |
AB_AYxxxx R97892.-R97899. |
Number of Absences in Academic Year xxxx Total absences in each academic year if youth was enrolled during that school year. For example, variable AB_AY1992 refers to absences in academic year 1992-93. May have been reported annually or summed from term-level data. Pertains to School 01. |
AB-MISS R97900. |
Number of Absences if Year Not Assigned Total absences for youth if absences are not classified by attendance year. Pertains to School 01. |
TARDY_AYxxxx R97901.-R97908. |
Number of Tardies in Academic Year xxxx Total tardies in each academic year if youth was enrolled during that school year. For example, variable TARDY_AY1992 refers to tardies in academic year 1992-93. May have been reported annually or summed from term-level data. Pertains to School 01. |
TARDY_MISS R97909. |
Number of Tardies if Year Not Assigned Total tardies for youth if tardies are not classified by attendance year. Pertains to School 01. |
FLAG_MISS_AB_AYxxxx R97910.-R97917. |
Enrolled, Missing Absences in Academic Yr xxxx Flag indicating that youth was enrolled in an academic year but was missing absence information for that year. For example, FLAG_MISS_AB_AY1992 refers to academic year 1992-93. Pertains to School 01. |
FLAG_MISS_TARDY_AYxxxx R97918.-R97925. |
Enrolled, Missing Tardies in Academic Yr xxxx Flag indicating that youth was enrolled in an academic year but was missing tardy information for that year. For example, FLAG_MISS_TARDY_AY1992 refers to academic year 1992-93. Pertains to School 01. |
AT_SCH R97926. |
Has R Left School School's report of youth's enrollment status in spring 2000. Pertains to School 01. |
LEFT_DATE RR97927.-R97927.01 |
Month, Year Left School Calendar month and year in which school assigned non-enrollment status to students who have left school. May differ from SCH_END_DATE because of incomplete requirements that delayed graduation beyond the final term in which student enrolled in courses. May also differ if school has a lag period in which students are not considered to have dropped out, or if a student who transfers out mid-session is recorded as enrolled until the end of that session. Pertains to School 01. |
LEFT_REASON R97928. |
Reason Left School School's report of student's departure status for students who have left school. Pertains to School 01. |
GPA R97929. |
GPA for Last Year Grade-point average as calculated by the school in its metric for last year of youth's enrollment. May not match GPA calculated using CRS_GRADE.xx values due to conversion of grades to uniform scale, weighting procedures at school, or other school-specific GPA calculations (e.g., physical education courses do not contribute to academic GPA). Pertains to School 01. |
CLASS_RANK R97930. |
Class Rank for Last Year Youth's rank in class for last year of enrollment. Pertains to School 01. |
CLASS_SIZE R97931. |
Class Size Category for Last Year Categorical variable denoting size of youth's class (grade level) during last year of enrollment. Pertains to School 01. |
PSAT_MATH R97932. |
PSAT Math Score Standardized PSAT math score for youth's last administration of PSAT. |
PSAT_VERB R97933. |
PSAT Verbal Score Standardized PSAT verbal score for youth's last administration of PSAT. |
ACT_COMP R97934. |
Composite ACT Score Standardized ACT composite score for youth's last administration of ACT. Entered directly from transcript, may not correspond to sum of component scores. |
ACT_ENG R97935. |
ACT English Score Standardized ACT English score for youth's last administration of ACT. Entered directly from transcript, may not sum with other components to composite score. |
ACT_MATH R97936. |
ACT Math Score Standardized ACT Math score for youth's last administration of ACT. Entered directly from transcript, may not sum with other components to composite score. |
ACT_READ R97937. |
ACT Reading Score Standardized ACT Reading score for youth's last administration of ACT. Entered directly from transcript, may not sum with other components to composite score. |
SAT_VERBAL R97938. |
SAT Verbal Score Standardized SAT Verbal score for youth's last administration of SAT. |
SAT_MATH R97939. |
SAT Math Score Standardized SAT Math score for youth's last administration of SAT. |
SAT_DATE R97940.-R97940.01 |
Month, Year SAT Was Taken Month and year of youth's last administration of SAT. |
AP_ART R97 |
AP Art Score Highest test score for an Advanced Placement art exam. This Advance Placement variable is available for Wave 2 students only; students taking this exam in Wave 1 would have their score reported in the OTH_AP variable series below. |
AP_BIO R97941. |
AP Biology Score Highest test score for an Advanced Placement biology exam. |
AP_CALC R97942. |
AP Calculus Score Highest test score for an Advanced Placement calculus exam. |
AP_CHEM R97943. |
AP Chemistry Score Highest test score for an Advanced Placement chemistry exam. |
AP_CMPSCI R97 |
AP Computer Science Score Highest test score for an Advanced Placement computer science exam. This Advance Placement variable is available for Wave 2 students only; students taking this exam in Wave 1 would have their score reported in the OTH_AP variable series below. |
AP_ECON R97 |
AP Economics Score Highest test score for an Advanced Placement economics exam. This Advance Placement variable is available for Wave 2 students only; students taking this exam in Wave 1 would have their score reported in the OTH_AP variable series below. |
AP_ENG R97944. |
AP English Score Highest test score for an Advanced Placement English exam. |
AP_HIST_EU R97945. |
AP European History Score Highest test score for an Advanced Placement European history exam. |
AP_GOVT R97946. |
AP Government and Politics Score Highest test score for an Advanced Placement government and politics exam. |
AP_INTENG R97 |
AP International English Score Highest test score for an Advanced Placement international English exam. This Advance Placement variable is available for Wave 2 students only; students taking this exam in Wave 1 would have their score reported in the OTH_AP variable series below. |
AP_PHYS R97947. |
AP Physics Score Highest test score for an Advanced Placement physics exam. |
AP_PSYCH R97948. |
AP Psychology Score Highest test score for an Advanced Placement psychology exam. |
AP_SPAN R97949. |
AP Spanish Score Highest test score for an Advanced Placement Spanish exam. |
AP_STAT R97 |
AP Statistics Score Highest test score for an Advanced Placement statistics exam. This Advance Placement variable is available for Wave 2 students only; students taking this exam in Wave 1 would have their score reported in the OTH_AP variable series below. |
AP_HIST_US R97950. |
AP U.S. History Score Highest test score for an Advanced Placement U.S. history exam. |
OTH_AP1 R97959. |
Number Other AP 1 Total number of other Advanced Placement exams on which youth received a score of 1. May include additional exams in subjects listed above. |
OTH_AP2 R97960. |
Number Other AP 2 Total number of other Advanced Placement exams on which youth received a score of 2. May include additional exams in subjects listed above. |
OTH_AP3 R97961. |
Number Other AP 3 Total number of other Advanced Placement exams on which youth received a score of 3. May include additional exams in subjects listed above. |
OTH_AP4 R97962. |
Number Other AP 4 Total number of other Advanced Placement exams on which youth received a score of 4. May include additional exams in subjects listed above. |
OTH_AP5 R97963. |
Number Other AP 5 Total number of other Advanced Placement exams on which youth received a score of 5. May include additional exams in subjects listed above. |
SATII_BIO R97951. |
SAT II Biology Score Highest standardized score for an SAT 2 Biology exam. |
SATII_MATH1 R97952. |
SAT II Math I Score Highest standardized score for an SAT II Math I exam. |
SATII_MATH2 R97953. |
SAT II Math II Score Highest standardized score for an SAT II Math II exam. |
SATII_CHEM R97954. |
SAT II Chemistry Score Highest standardized score for an SAT II Chemistry exam. |
SATII_ENG_LIT R97955. |
SAT II English Literature Score Highest standardized score for an SAT II English Literature exam. |
SATII_ENG_WRITE R97956. |
SAT II English Writing Score Highest standardized score for an SAT II English Writing exam. |
SATII_HIST_AM R97957. |
SAT II American History and Social Studies Score Highest standardized score for an SAT II American History and Social Studies exam. |
SATII_PHYS R97 |
SAT II Physics Score Highest standardized score for an SAT II Physics exam. This SAT II variable is available for Wave 2 students only; students taking this exam in Wave 1 would have their score reported in the OTH_SAT variable series below. |
SATII_HIST_WORLD R97958. |
SAT II World History Score Highest standardized score for an SAT II World History exam. |
SATII_SPANL R97 |
SAT II Spanish Score Highest standardized score for an SAT II Spanish exam. This SAT II variable is available for Wave 2 students only; students taking this exam in Wave 1 would have their score reported in the OTH_SAT variable series below. |
OTH_SAT1 R97964. |
Number Other SAT 200400 Total number of other SAT II exams on which youth received a score of 200-400. May include additional exams in subjects listed above. |
OTH_SAT2 R97965. |
Number Other SAT 401500 Total number of other SAT II exams on which youth received a score of 401-500. May include additional exams in subjects listed above. |
OTH_SAT3 R97966. |
Number Other SAT 501600 Total number of other SAT II exams on which youth received a score of 501-600. May include additional exams in subjects listed above. |
OTH_SAT4 R97967. |
Number Other SAT 601700 Total number of other SAT II exams on which youth received a score of 601-700. May include additional exams in subjects listed above. |
OTH_SAT5 R97968. |
Number Other SAT 701800 Total number of other SAT II exams on which youth received a score of 701-800. May include additional exams in subjects listed above. |
Available in the restricted-use geocode data only, these variables record information concerning high-school graduation requirements applicable to each case. GRADREQ_TYPE describes whether the requirements were in terms of credits, terms, or term/years. The five credit-requirement variables, GRADREQ_TOTAL through GRADREQ_SOC, give the total number of credits required for graduation and the numbers required from courses in the four specific subject areas of English, Math, Science, and Social Studies. The final variable, GRADREQ_SOURCE, shows where the requirements information was obtained. We preferred to show requirements information that came from or applied to the student's particular school, either through the individual school's catalog or website or from the school district. However, in some cases school-specific information was not available, and in these cases, we show graduation requirements set by the state in which the primary school was located, where these requirements could be determined. The values of the five credits-requirements variables must be divided by 100 before they can be used. Variable question names and titles are as follows:
Question Name |
Title |
---|---|
TRANS_GRADREQ_TYPE | Credits or time requirements? |
TRANS_GRADREQ_TOTAL | Graduation requirements, total |
TRANS_GRADREQ_ENGL | Graduation requirements, English |
TRANS_GRADREQ_MATH | Graduation requirements, Math |
TRANS_GRADREQ_SCI | Graduation requirements, Science |
TRANS_GRADREQ_SOC | Graduation requirements, Social Studies |
TRANS_GRADREQ_SOURCE | Source of requirements data |
Restricted-use data
Information about access to restricted-use geographic and school survey data is available on the Accessing Data page.