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| Year | # of jobs | % of population |
|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 715 | 0.00% |
| 2020 | 684 | 0.00% |
| 2019 | 676 | 0.00% |
| 2018 | 635 | 0.00% |
| 2017 | 613 | 0.00% |
| Year | Avg. salary | Hourly rate | % Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | $48,904 | $23.51 | +2.4% |
| 2024 | $47,741 | $22.95 | +0.6% |
| 2023 | $47,476 | $22.83 | +0.8% |
| 2022 | $47,078 | $22.63 | +2.3% |
| 2021 | $46,033 | $22.13 | +1.4% |
| Rank | State | Population | # of jobs | Employment/ 1000ppl |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | North Dakota | 755,393 | 253 | 33% |
| 2 | South Dakota | 869,666 | 254 | 29% |
| 3 | Kansas | 2,913,123 | 821 | 28% |
| 4 | New Mexico | 2,088,070 | 583 | 28% |
| 5 | Arkansas | 3,004,279 | 735 | 24% |
| 6 | Wyoming | 579,315 | 132 | 23% |
| 7 | Alaska | 739,795 | 163 | 22% |
| 8 | Minnesota | 5,576,606 | 1,107 | 20% |
| 9 | Alabama | 4,874,747 | 878 | 18% |
| 10 | Delaware | 961,939 | 169 | 18% |
| 11 | Oklahoma | 3,930,864 | 665 | 17% |
| 12 | Nebraska | 1,920,076 | 317 | 17% |
| 13 | District of Columbia | 693,972 | 106 | 15% |
| 14 | Pennsylvania | 12,805,537 | 1,618 | 13% |
| 15 | Georgia | 10,429,379 | 1,380 | 13% |
| 16 | Arizona | 7,016,270 | 913 | 13% |
| 17 | Wisconsin | 5,795,483 | 733 | 13% |
| 18 | Texas | 28,304,596 | 3,278 | 12% |
| 19 | Indiana | 6,666,818 | 784 | 12% |
| 20 | Iowa | 3,145,711 | 384 | 12% |
| Rank | City | # of jobs | Employment/ 1000ppl | Avg. salary |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Orlando | 1 | 0% | $41,816 |
Angelo State University

Seattle University

East Tennessee State University
American University

Pace University
Angelo State University
Accounting And Related Services
Jeremy St. John: I think reliability has become one of the most sought-after skills. Showing up on time and having a good work ethic are highly sought after skills. More and more I am hearing from my students that the employers want them to be able to use AI at work. Students able to work with AI are telling me things like "my boss says I am the most productive employee, and it is because I use AI to help me do the work." If the ability to work with AI can make you the most productive employee in the eyes of your employer, that is an important skill to have. Technical skills should continue to be in demand. People-skills, critical thinking, and systems thinking are already in demand and I think they will grow in importance simply because they complement AI.

Seattle University
History Department
Theresa Earenfight Ph.D.: As a historian of the European Middle Ages, I'm struck by how students this past year have acquired something scarce: historical empathy. The past can seem so remote, so very different from our lived experiences today, and this can make history seem irrelevant. But this fall, I was teaching a section on the bubonic plague, which historians of medicine now know was a global pandemic, not just an epidemic in Europe. Usually, students are fascinated by the gruesome medical details, but not this group.
They did not need or want to look death in the eyes. They wanted to know how did people react? How did they get back to normal? When we ticked off the list of reactions--fear, distrust of science (such as it was in 1348), xenophobia, scapegoating, economic collapse, hoarding supplies, turn to religion, gallows humor about worms crawling about corpses--they got it. When we talked about the aftermath--eat, drink, be merry, and protest the inequality--they got it. That is historical empathy, and I'm sad that this was how it had to be learned, but it will give them broader compassion that can encompass people alive today.
Theresa Earenfight Ph.D.: Altruism. Anyone who reaches out and does work that repairs the shredded world and does not ask for an avalanche of cash. And an understanding of how privilege works and a desire to work to rein in the harm of unchecked privilege.

Dr. Frederick Gordon Ph.D.: Graduate students will need to refocus on the changing institutional role, being both remote and in-person, and impacting agency goals and performance.
Dr. Adelaide Kelly-Massoud: Well, every teacher and teacher candidate was thrust into distance learning. Misguided attempts to foster understanding often leaned our adult distant learning pedagogy. Teachers, and those who prepare teachers, found their job to research, define, design, and implement meaningful teaching and learning using a virtual platform. Words such as synchronous and asynchronous are now a part of our everyday vernacular. But there is a much more optimistic change on the horizon that we can thank coronavirus for.
Communication and collaboration have been forced to change. Parents and Teachers are more connected and have been put in a position to leverage technology to build networks of support and consistent dialog. I urge teachers to leverage this in their future as we work to reopening schools; we should learn from this experience to leverage technology to keep us connected.

Pace University
Department of Public Administration
Dr. Sheying Chen Ph.D.: State and local governments re-evaluate their current capacities and plan for reduced revenues in the coming fiscal years. This will result in a shift in hiring in the public sector that may last for some time; thus, graduates should be better prepared for finding job opportunities, networking, etc. There is likely a decrease in demand for graduates in the next couple of years, although the trend is not unique to this field. It's an excellent time to go back to school and get a degree in active pursuit of new skills for the changing work environment. Active learners may demand more creative programming and increased networking that may also help to advance the field of public administration.