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Table |
SE Table |
TPF |
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Table 1 |
By gender, percentage distribution (in columns) of 1992–93 bachelor’s degree recipients’ undergraduate major
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Table 2 |
By undergraduate major, percentage distribution (in columns) of 1992–93 bachelor’s degree recipients’ selected characteristics
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Table 3 |
Percentage distribution of 1992–93 bachelor’s degree recipients’ employment and enrollment status in 1994, 1997, and 2003, by undergraduate major and previous employment and enrollment status |
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Table 4 |
Percentage of 1992–93 bachelor’s degree recipients with selected employment and enrollment patterns across 1994, 1997, and 2003, by undergraduate major
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Table 5 |
Percentage of 1992–93 bachelor’s degree recipients enrolled in 1994, 1997, or 2003 and their enrollment patterns, by undergraduate major
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Table 6 |
Average number of years at employer for 1992–93 bachelor’s degree recipients who were employed in 1994, 1997, and 2003, by selected characteristics
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Table 7 |
Percentage of all 1992–93 bachelor’s degree recipients who were employed at various levels in 1994, 1997, and 2003, by selected characteristics
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Table 8 |
Unemployment experience overall and between interviews among 1992–93 bachelor’s degree recipients, by undergraduate major andemployment/enrollment trajectory: 1993–2003
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Table 9 |
Labor force absences overall and between interviews for 1992–93 bachelor’s degree recipients, by gender, undergraduate major, and family status: 1993–2003
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Table 10A |
Percentage distribution of 1992–93 bachelor’s degree recipients’ occupations in 1994, 1997, and 2003, by undergraduate major
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Table 10B |
Percentage distribution of 1992–93 bachelor’s degree recipients’ occupations in 1994, 1997, and 2003, by undergraduate major—Continued
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Table 11A |
Percentage distribution of 1992–93 bachelor’s degree recipients’ industries in 1994, 1997, and 2003, by undergraduate major
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Table 11B |
Percentage distribution of 1992–93 bachelor’s degree recipients’ industries in 1994, 1997, and 2003, by undergraduate major—Continued
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Table 12 |
Earnings (in constant 2003 dollars) of full- and part-time employed 1992–93 bachelor’s degree recipients in 1994, 1997, and 2003, by selected characteristics
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Table 13 |
For 1992–93 bachelor’s degree recipients employed full time in 2003, least squares coefficients and standard errors representing intergroup salary differences after adjusting for covariation among variables, by selected characteristics
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No SE for this table |
No TPF for this table |
Table 14 |
Percentage of full- and part-time employed 1992–93 bachelor’s degree recipients reporting health and retirement benefits at work in 1994, 1997, and 2003, by undergraduate major andemployment/enrollment trajectory
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Table 15 |
Percentage distribution of full- and part-time employed 1992–93 bachelor’s degree recipients’ career potential of 1994 job, percentage reporting that job required a bachelor’s degree, and percentage reporting that job was closely related to their major, by undergraduate major
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Table 16 |
Percentage distribution of full- and part-time employed 1992–93 bachelor’s degree recipients’ perception of the career potential of their 1997 job, by undergraduate major and characteristics of 1994 job
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Table 17 |
Percentage of full- and part-time employed 1992–93 bachelor’s degree recipients who held various perceptions of their work in 2003, by undergraduate major and characteristics of their 1994 and 1997 jobs
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Table 18 |
Percentage of full- and part-time employed 1992–93 bachelor’s degree recipients who were satisfied with various aspects of their work in 2003, by undergraduate major and employment/enrollment trajectory
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Table 19 |
Percentage of employed 1992–93 bachelor’s degree recipients who had various employment and enrollment trajectories from 1994 to 2003, by characteristics of 1994, 1997, and 2003 jobs
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