This is the complete Dictionary of
Occupational Titles (DOT) revised fourth edition, as supplied electronically by the US Dept. of Labor, provided, as a
public service, by ITA, makers of DOT and O*Net for Windows.
You can find a job title and job description in a number of ways.
To browse by job category, click on the CONTENTS tab above.
To browse the alphabetical index click on a letter of the alphabet at left.
Or search for anything by clicking the SEARCH button above or the ? button at left.
Bibliographic Citation
National Academy of Sciences, Committee on Occupational Classification
and Analysis. DICTIONARY OF OCCUPATIONAL TITLES (DOT): PART I - CURRENT
POPULATION SURVEY, APRIL 1971, AUGMENTED WITH DOT CHARACTERISTICS, AND
PART II - FOURTH EDITION DICTIONARY OF DOT SCORES FOR 1970 CENSUS CATEGORIES
[Computer file]. Washington, DC: U.S. Dept. of Commerce, Bureau of the
Census [producer], 197?. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for
Political and Social Research [distributor], 1981.
Related Publications
Miller, Ann R., Trieman, Donald J., Cain, Pamela S. and Patricia A. Roos
(eds.). 1980 WORK, JOBS, AND OCCUPATIONS: A CRITICAL REVIEW OF THE DICTIONARY
OF OCCUPATIONAL TITLES (Final report to the U.S. Dept. of Labor from the
Committee on Occupational Classification and Analysis). Washington, DC:
National Academy Press.
Copyright notice: Please note that we have created the format of the web pages, but the content of this website was created, and supplied to us by the U.S. Department of Labor, so, all the occupational titles, codes and job descriptions are in the public domain. Please feel free to copy and publish at will.
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