Who Participates in the Skilled Technical Workforce After College and What Are Their Educational Pathways?

The skilled technical workforce (STW) comprises workers in occupations that require significant science, technology, engineering, or mathematics (STEM) skills but not a bachelor’s degree for entry. The United States had over 17 million STW workers in 2017, and is expected to be short about 3.4 milli...

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Main Author: Xianglei Chen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Nevada, Las Vegas, Department of Teaching and Learning 2021-05-01
Series:Journal of Research in Technical Careers
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalscholarship.unlv.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1092&context=jrtc
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author Xianglei Chen
author_facet Xianglei Chen
author_sort Xianglei Chen
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description The skilled technical workforce (STW) comprises workers in occupations that require significant science, technology, engineering, or mathematics (STEM) skills but not a bachelor’s degree for entry. The United States had over 17 million STW workers in 2017, and is expected to be short about 3.4 million workers who are qualified for the available STW positions by 2022. Despite the important contribution of the STW to the U.S. economy, the policy discourse on the STEM workforce has largely focused on workers with bachelor’s or graduate degrees, overlooking those without a 4-year degree. Consequently, knowledge about the STW is limited. This paper draws on a recently available national data source to provide a close look at STW workers through the lens of U.S. undergraduates who joined the STW after college. Multivariate results indicate that students who held STW jobs after college fared better than those who held nontechnical jobs on a range of employment outcomes, including salary, access to workforce benefits, alignment between college majors and intended careers, and job satisfaction. Multivariate analyses also confirmed that graduating from a less-than-4-year institution, earning a subbaccalaureate credential, and majoring in STEM, healthcare, and such technical fields as manufacturing, construction, repair, and transportation are common paths to STW careers. Despite the benefits of STW employment, however, relatively few students pursued STW jobs after college. Significantly fewer female than male students and fewer Black than White students pursued STW jobs, even after controlling for such factors as major field, type of last institution, STEM credits, and educational attainment. However, post-college STW participation did not differ between Hispanic and White students or vary by students’ family income or their parents’ education attainment.
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spelling doaj.art-141798b995b647ae8e1cb9efd2d351232022-12-22T01:54:36ZengUniversity of Nevada, Las Vegas, Department of Teaching and LearningJournal of Research in Technical Careers2578-21182021-05-01512346https://doi.org/10.9741/2578-2118.1092Who Participates in the Skilled Technical Workforce After College and What Are Their Educational Pathways?Xianglei Chen0RTI InternationalThe skilled technical workforce (STW) comprises workers in occupations that require significant science, technology, engineering, or mathematics (STEM) skills but not a bachelor’s degree for entry. The United States had over 17 million STW workers in 2017, and is expected to be short about 3.4 million workers who are qualified for the available STW positions by 2022. Despite the important contribution of the STW to the U.S. economy, the policy discourse on the STEM workforce has largely focused on workers with bachelor’s or graduate degrees, overlooking those without a 4-year degree. Consequently, knowledge about the STW is limited. This paper draws on a recently available national data source to provide a close look at STW workers through the lens of U.S. undergraduates who joined the STW after college. Multivariate results indicate that students who held STW jobs after college fared better than those who held nontechnical jobs on a range of employment outcomes, including salary, access to workforce benefits, alignment between college majors and intended careers, and job satisfaction. Multivariate analyses also confirmed that graduating from a less-than-4-year institution, earning a subbaccalaureate credential, and majoring in STEM, healthcare, and such technical fields as manufacturing, construction, repair, and transportation are common paths to STW careers. Despite the benefits of STW employment, however, relatively few students pursued STW jobs after college. Significantly fewer female than male students and fewer Black than White students pursued STW jobs, even after controlling for such factors as major field, type of last institution, STEM credits, and educational attainment. However, post-college STW participation did not differ between Hispanic and White students or vary by students’ family income or their parents’ education attainment.https://digitalscholarship.unlv.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1092&context=jrtcskilled technical workforcestemtechnical careertransitionundergraduate
spellingShingle Xianglei Chen
Who Participates in the Skilled Technical Workforce After College and What Are Their Educational Pathways?
Journal of Research in Technical Careers
skilled technical workforce
stem
technical career
transition
undergraduate
title Who Participates in the Skilled Technical Workforce After College and What Are Their Educational Pathways?
title_full Who Participates in the Skilled Technical Workforce After College and What Are Their Educational Pathways?
title_fullStr Who Participates in the Skilled Technical Workforce After College and What Are Their Educational Pathways?
title_full_unstemmed Who Participates in the Skilled Technical Workforce After College and What Are Their Educational Pathways?
title_short Who Participates in the Skilled Technical Workforce After College and What Are Their Educational Pathways?
title_sort who participates in the skilled technical workforce after college and what are their educational pathways
topic skilled technical workforce
stem
technical career
transition
undergraduate
url https://digitalscholarship.unlv.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1092&context=jrtc
work_keys_str_mv AT xiangleichen whoparticipatesintheskilledtechnicalworkforceaftercollegeandwhataretheireducationalpathways