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U.S. Department of Labor
Industry: Government; Labor
Number of terms: 77176
Number of blossaries: 0
Company Profile:
A teacher, elementary school or a teacher, secondary school who instructs students unable to attend classes because of confinement at home or hospital.
Industry:Professional careers
A worker who works in direct support of engineers or scientists, utilizing theoretical knowledge of fundamental scientific, engineering, mathematical, or draft design principles. Solves practical problems encountered in fields of specialization, such as those concerned with development of electrical and electronic circuits, and establishment of testing methods for electrical, electronic, electromechanical, and hydromechanical devices and mechanisms, application of engineering principles in solving design, development, and modification problems of parts or assemblies for products or systems, and application of natural and physical science principles to basic or applied research problems in fields, such as metallurgy, chemistry, and physics. Classifications are made according to specialization as electronics technician, mathematical technician.
Industry:Professional careers
Workers possessing college degrees or equivalent experience in textile technology. These workers usually enter textile industry as trainees for any one of several supervisory or technical occupations. Classifications are made according to specialty as cloth designer, manager, quality control, dyer, supervisor, production superintendent, weaving supervisor. Professional engineers who refer to themselves as textile engineers because of their experience in the textile industry should be classified according to their specialty as chemical engineer, electrical engineer, mechanical engineer.
Industry:Professional careers
Workers engaged in building parts of tires or assembling whole tires. Classifications are made according to part of tire being made as band builder, or according to tire assembled as tire builder, automobile, tire builder, heavy service.
Industry:Professional careers
Workers who operate or tend columns or towers in chemical absorption, distillation, stripping, rectification, or related processes. Classifications are made according to process operated as absorption operator or according to equipment unit as tower helper.
Industry:Professional careers
Any worker who processes or otherwise handles toxic explosives, such as tetryl and nitroglycerin, or toxic ingredients, such as acids and benzene. Classifications are made according to equipment used or according to material handled as tetryl-screen operator.
Industry:Professional careers
Workers who are engaged, under direct supervision, in learning a job or trade that may require up to several months of continuous on-the-job training, with or without related schooling in vocational subjects, before the worker may be considered fully qualified to perform the job. Such workers should be treated as entry applicants except that, if they have completed their training requirements, they should be classified according to the job learned. Workers who are learning a trade through apprenticeship training should be classified in accordance with the procedure set forth under apprentice master title.
Industry:Professional careers
An engineer who works under supervison of experienced engineers to gain qualifying experience in a particular field. Classifications are made according to field of specialization as chemical engineer, electrical engineer, mechanical engineer.
Industry:Professional careers
Workers who drive trucks to transport materials, merchandise, equipment, or people. Workers are classified according to type of truck as dump-truck driver, tractor-trailer-truck driver, truck driver, light.
Industry:Professional careers
Workers who drive trucks to transport materials, merchandise, equipment, or people. Workers are classified according to type of truck as dump-truck driver, tractor-trailer-truck driver, truck driver, light.
Industry:Professional careers