Interactive Monday: What are the opportunity industries in your community?
This Brookings research provides students with information about the quality of job opportunities in the 100 largest metro areas. With this interactive, students select a metro area and immediately get a read on the job market in that area. When these interactives allow students to understand their community better, we know it will engage them.
Here's Durham-Chapel Hill, NC as an example:
As you can see the chart is color-coded based on four job categories:
- Promising jobs defined as "entry-level positions from which most workers can reach a good job within 10 years."
- Good jobs "provide stable employment, middle-class wages and benefits."
- High-skill jobs are "good and promising jobs held by workers with a bachelor's degree."
- Other jobs are "all other jobs."
Questions:
- Using data from this chart, how would you describe the quality of jobs in this metro area?
- Which job categories have the highest percentage of high-skill jobs?
- Which job category has the highest percentage of "good jobs?"
- How would you think about the "other jobs" category? Are they better than "high skilled jobs" or not?
- Using data from this chart, does having a bachelor's degree open up more opportunities for workers?
Activity idea: Have students pick two metro areas that they are interested in and compare the quality of jobs there. Their task is to identify which metro area would be a better fit for them based on their educational and career goals.
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The other interactive your students should engage with provides a more macro view of a metro area economy by identifying the percentage of jobs that fit into each job category. For example, here's San Jose, CA's profile:
What's cool about this interactive is that as you scroll over the individual bars the metro area appears not only on one chart but all three.
Question:
- Your friend plans to start working after high school and says "I've always wanted to move to sunny California and I hear San Jose is perfect for someone without a college degree>" Waht would you tell him based on the data in this chart?
- Which city might be best for workers without a bachelor's degree?
- Do you think that jobs held by workers with a bachelor's degree pay more? Explain.
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Check out more of our interactives in our Interactive Library!
About the Author
Tim Ranzetta
Tim's saving habits started at seven when a neighbor with a broken hip gave him a dog walking job. Her recovery, which took almost a year, resulted in Tim getting to know the bank tellers quite well (and accumulating a savings account balance of over $300!). His recent entrepreneurial adventures have included driving a shredding truck, analyzing executive compensation packages for Fortune 500 companies and helping families make better college financing decisions. After volunteering in 2010 to create and teach a personal finance program at Eastside College Prep in East Palo Alto, Tim saw firsthand the impact of an engaging and activity-based curriculum, which inspired him to start a new non-profit, Next Gen Personal Finance.
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