|  |  Socioeconomic 
        Status of Enlisted Accessions and Civilians Occupation [1] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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            Table 
            7.5 compares the occupations of recruit and CPS parents.  Although 
            there was considerable similarity between the occupations held by 
            DoD parents and those held by CPS parents, the data show that DoD 
            parents were underrepresented in certain high-status occupations.  
            Both DoD fathers and mothers were less likely to have either executive, 
            administrative, and managerial occupations, or professional occupations.  
            In addition, DoD fathers were underrepresented in sales occupations.  
            On the other hand, DoD fathers were more likely than CPS fathers to 
            have occupations involving precision production, craft, and repair.  
            They were also slightly more prevalent in protective service and transportation 
            occupations.  DoD mothers were more likely than their CPS counterparts 
            to be in service occupations.  Finally, both DoD fathers and mothers 
            were more likely to be in the military than were CPS parents. 
            [2]   There were no significant differences between the occupations 
            of Active and Reserve Component parents. 
  
               [1] To determine occupation, recruits provided open-ended descriptions 
              of their parents jobs.  CPS respondents answered similarly about 
              their own primary occupation.  The descriptions were manually coded 
              to 3-digit Census occupation codes, which were then collapsed into 
              13 major Census categories.  
              [2] Differences in the number of parents in the military 
              are due, at least in part, to differences in the way these occupations 
              are coded in the military and civilian surveys.  In the CPS data, 
              an occupation is assigned a military code only if the military job 
              cannot be classified in another occupational category.  In the DoD 
              data, all parents in the military are assigned a military occupational 
              code. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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