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Search "Dictionary of Occupational Titles"
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Dictionary of Occupational Titles | |
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About 5 pages (1,344 words) in 2 products |
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Encyclopedia and Summary Information
summary from source:

Occupational Information Network Summary
690 words, approx. 2 pages Occupational Information Network O*NET, or the Occupational Information Network, is an electronic replacement for the Dictionary of Occupational Titles (DOT). Like the DOT, which was last published in 1991, O*NET provides a comprehensive database of...
summary from source:

Dictionary of Occupational Titles Information
654 words, approx. 2 pages
 The Dictionary of Occupational Titles, commonly known as the DOT (Pronounced Dee-Oh-Tee) was the creation of the U.S. Employment Service, which used its thousands of occupational definitions to match job seekers to jobs from 1939 to the late 1990s....



summary from source:
 Occupational Outlook Quarterly
Computer-related occupations in the revised 'Dictionary of Occupational Titles.'
06/22/1991: 1,081 words, approx. 4 pages Computer occupations have their own division in the 1991 revision of the Dictionary of Occupational Titles (DOT). Division 03 includes computer-related occupations within the professional, technical, and managerial category. New definitions were also written and existing definitions were modified for computer-related occupations in...
summary from source:
 Occupational Outlook Quarterly
The 1991 revision of DOT. ('Dictionary of Occupational Titles')
06/22/1991: 665 words, approx. 2 pages The United States Employment Service has released a new version of the Dictionary of Occupational Titles (DOT), one of the most widely used sources of basic occupational information in the United States. The 1991 revision of the Fourth Edition (1977) provides fuller occupational...


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Dictionary of Occupational Titles | |
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About 5 pages (1,344 words) in 2 products |
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