In my previous two blogs, I discussed the statistical
relationship between 35 skills and the earnings of various occupations. In the
first of these, I analyzed the relationship as I calculated it for close to
1,000 occupations. In the more recent of the two, I restricted the analysis to
only those requiring a bachelor’s degree, and I found some significant
differences in how the 35 skills ranked in terms of their monetary payoff. This
time, I’m considering only those occupations that normally require a graduate or professional degree, so (as
in the previous blog’s subset) difference in the worker’s level of education is
not a factor that affects the payoff of the worker’s skills when workers in different
occupations are compared.
This graduate/professional group includes among its
highest-paying occupations several job titles for medical doctors, plus other
highly-paid health-care occupations, such as Nurse Anesthetists, Podiatrists,
and Prosthodontists. It also includes many kinds of scientists (both natural
and social) and many postsecondary teaching occupations.
In the leftmost column of the table below, you can see the
correlations I found. In the second
column from the right is the rank that each skill achieved when I computed the
correlations for all occupations. And
in the rightmost column is the rank when I looked at only bachelor’s-level occupations. These two columns at the right allow
you to make easy comparisons to the tables in the previous two blogs.
Corre- lation
|
Skill
|
Rank for All Occupa-tions
|
Rank for Bachelor's- Level Occupa-tions
|
0.52
|
Judgment and Decision Making
|
2
|
5
|
0.45
|
Operation Monitoring
|
29
|
17
|
0.44
|
Operation and Control
|
33
|
33
|
0.43
|
Complex Problem Solving
|
1
|
2
|
0.42
|
Equipment Selection
|
32
|
30
|
0.41
|
Troubleshooting
|
31
|
18
|
0.41
|
Critical Thinking
|
4
|
13
|
0.39
|
Science
|
14
|
23
|
0.37
|
Quality Control Analysis
|
28
|
19
|
0.33
|
Reading Comprehension
|
5
|
21
|
0.30
|
Coordination
|
19
|
16
|
0.29
|
Service Orientation
|
26
|
34
|
0.29
|
Time Management
|
9
|
11
|
0.25
|
Operations Analysis
|
12
|
6
|
0.25
|
Management of Personnel Resources
|
16
|
9
|
0.24
|
Active Learning
|
3
|
10
|
0.21
|
Technology Design
|
27
|
15
|
0.18
|
Monitoring
|
7
|
12
|
0.18
|
Equipment Maintenance
|
35
|
29
|
0.17
|
Management of Financial Resources
|
23
|
4
|
0.16
|
Management of Material Resources
|
24
|
8
|
0.15
|
Persuasion
|
18
|
22
|
0.14
|
Repairing
|
34
|
31
|
0.14
|
Active Listening
|
10
|
25
|
0.11
|
Mathematics
|
20
|
7
|
0.10
|
Negotiation
|
22
|
24
|
0.09
|
Social Perceptiveness
|
21
|
35
|
0.06
|
Systems Evaluation
|
6
|
3
|
0.03
|
Systems Analysis
|
8
|
1
|
0.01
|
Installation
|
30
|
28
|
0.01
|
Instructing
|
15
|
20
|
-0.07
|
Programming
|
25
|
14
|
-0.15
|
Speaking
|
13
|
27
|
-0.22
|
Writing
|
11
|
26
|
-0.24
|
Learning Strategies
|
17
|
32
|
In the following comments I make about the correlations,
please understand that I am discussing various occupations only in terms of
their skills and their salaries. I am not making overall value judgments about the occupations. If I mention that counseling
occupations (for example) are comparatively low-paid within this subset, that
does not mean that I do not hold counseling occupations in low regard. Monetary
rewards are only one reason that people show up for work in the morning.
As in the tables in the previous two blogs, some cerebral
skills—Judgment and Decision Making, Complex Problem Solving, and Critical Thinking—continue
to appear high in the table. But it is startling to see how much three other
skills—Operation Monitoring, Operation and Control, and Equipment
Selection—get boosted compared to their rankings in the two previous blogs. My
guess is that in the context of this subset of occupations, these skills are
associated not with low-paid mechanical jobs but rather with very highly-paid
health-care occupations. The “operations” that are going on are medical
procedures, and the “equipment” being selected is health-care tools such as
scalpels, dental drills, and heart-lung machines. The grad/prof workers who don’t use these skills tend to be
college professors and various kinds of counselors, who are comparatively
low-paid in this subset.
One other skill that can be considered basically mechanical—Installation—ranks
about as low here as it does in the previous two blogs, and Repairing ranks
only slightly higher.
It’s noteworthy that the managerial skills, which rose in
the ranks among bachelor’s-level occupations, fall back down in the rankings
here. (Besides the skills with “Management” in their title, I would include Systems
Evaluation and Systems Analysis among managerial skills.) There are several
well-paid managerial occupations at the bachelor’s level, but at the grad/prof
level the managerial tasks are mostly handed off to workers with less
education, and those grad/prof occupations that do involve a fair amount of
managerial tasks—e.g., Librarians, Curators, and Farm and Home Management
Advisors—are comparatively low-paid for this subset.
Several of the skills that are associated with college
faculty—e.g., Instructing, Speaking, and Writing—rank among the lowest in this
table, just as many of the college-teaching occupations rank among the
lower-paid in this subset. (College teaching was once my career goal, but with insights
I gained with the help of the recently deceased Richard Nelson Bolles, I set
off in a different direction.)
It’s a bit surprising to find Mathematics ranking as low as it
does here, considering how much of this skill is needed to get through the
educational programs for many highly-paid health-care occupations, but
evidently the practitioners do not use
much high-level mathematics on the job. This contrasts sharply with the
bachelor’s-level subset, where the skill is used at a high level by well-paid
managerial and engineering occupations. Science, on the other hand, remains
fairly high up in the table above.
Programming here ranks even lower than it did among all occupations. Evidently the highly-paid workers in the
grad/prof subset use programming, like mathematics, only at a fairly low level.
It ranks much higher among the bachelor’s-level occupations, where it is a key
skill among certain well-paid technical occupations.
Service Orientation ranks only slightly above the middle of the grad/prof
table, but here it is notably higher than in either of the previous two blogs.
Among all occupations, it is
associated with low-paid jobs in the service sector. Among the grad/prof occupations,
however, its association with health-care professions helps boost it, although
its association with counseling occupations drags it down somewhat.
If anyone reading this blog wants to share reactions or would like
a copy of the source data, feel free to write me at Laurence@myself.com.