Ironworking

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Total Degrees​
Awarded in 2022
226
declining 28.5%
Median In-State​
Public Tuition
$2,862
growing NaNy%

About

In 2022, the locations with the highest concentration of Ironworking degree recipients are Indianapolis city (balance), IN, Pittsburgh, PA, and Cleveland, OH. In 2022, the locations with a relatively high number of Ironworking degree recipients are Ruidoso, NM, Indianapolis city (balance), IN, and Pittsburgh, PA. The most common degree awarded to students studying Ironworking is a 1 to 2 year postsecondary certificate.

Institutions

Information about the types of higher education institutions that grant degrees in Ironworking and the types of students that study this field. Ivy Tech Community College awards the most degrees in Ironworking in the US, but Community College of Allegheny County and Ivy Tech Community College have the highest percentage of degrees awarded in Ironworking.

The most common sector, by number of institutions, that offers Ironworking programs are Public, 2-year institutions (8 total). The most common sector, by number of degrees awarded, is Public, 2-year (225 completions).

Institutions

The most common sector, by number of degrees awarded in Ironworking, is Public, 2-year (225 completions in 2022).

The following chart shows the share of universities that offer Ironworking programs, by the total number of completions, colored and grouped by their sector.

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Tuition Costs for Common Institutions

$2,862
Median In-State Public

Ivy Tech Community College has the most Ironworking degree recipients, with 163 degrees awarded in 2022.

The following bar chart shows the state tuition for the top 5 institutions with the most degrees awarded in Ironworking.

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Specialized Colleges

Highest Concentration Institution
  1. 1.96%
  2. 0.524%

Out of all institutions that offer Ironworking programs and have at least 5 graduates in those programs, Community College of Allegheny County has the highest percentage of degrees awarded in Ironworking, with 1.96%.

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Degrees Awarded by County

Counties with the Most Degrees Awarded in Ironworking

This map shows the counties in the United States colored by the highest number of degrees awarded in Ironworking by year.

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Growth in Awarded Degrees

Counties with the Fastest Growing Number of Degrees Awarded

This map shows the counties in the United States colored by the highest growth in degrees awarded for Ironworking.

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Diversity

Demographic information for those who earn a degree in Precision Production in the United States.

The most common degree type these workers hold is a 1 to 2 Year Postsecondary Certificate. Male employees are more likely to hold Precision Production degrees, and White students are the most common race/ethnicty group awarded degrees in Precision Production (126 students).

Degrees Awarded

The most common degree types awarded to students graduating in Ironworking are 1 to 2 Year Postsecondary Certificate and Associates Degree.

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Sex Imbalance for Common Institutions

Male (90.7%)
Most Common Sex with a Degree in this Field

This chart shows the granted degrees by sex at the 5 institutions that graduate the most students in Ironworking.

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Race & Ethnicity by Degrees Awarded

Most Common Race or Ethnicity
  1. White
    126 degrees awarded
  2. Unknown
    81 degrees awarded
  3. Black or African American
    10 degrees awarded

This chart shows the number of degrees awarded in Ironworking for each race & ethnicity. White students earned the largest share of the degrees with this major.

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Race & Ethnicity by Sex

This chart illustrates the differences by sex for each race & ethnicity of 1 to 2 Year Postsecondary Certificate recipients in Ironworking.

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Skills

Data on the critical and distinctive skills necessary for those working in the Ironworking field from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Ironworking majors need many skills, but most especially Monitoring. The revealed comparative advantage (RCA) shows that Ironworking majors need more than the average amount of Repairing, Equipment Maintenance, Equipment Selection, Troubleshooting, Operation and Control, Operation Monitoring, Quality Control Analysis, Time Management, Monitoring, Coordination, Judgment and Decision Making, Instructing, Critical Thinking, Complex Problem Solving, Active Listening, Social Perceptiveness, Technology Design, Management of Personnel Resources, Mathematics, Speaking, Active Learning, Learning Strategies, Operations Analysis, Service Orientation, Negotiation, Reading Comprehension, Persuasion, Writing, Management of Material Resources, Systems Evaluation, Systems Analysis, Management of Financial Resources, Science, Installation, and Programming.

These two visualizations, one a radial chart and one a bar chart, show the same information, a rating of how necessary the following skills are for Ironworking majors. Toggle between "value" and "RCA" to see the absolute rating of that skill (value) and the revealed comparative advantage (RCA), or how much greater or lesser that skill's rating is than the average. The longer the bar or the closer the line comes to the circumference of the circle, the more important that skill is. The importance of Repairing is very distinctive for majors, but the Monitoring, Critical Thinking, Time Management, Operation Monitoring, Judgment and Decision Making, Coordination, Active Listening, Quality Control Analysis, Operation and Control, Complex Problem Solving, Troubleshooting, Speaking, Social Perceptiveness, Instructing, Reading Comprehension, Active Learning, Management of Personnel Resources, Equipment Selection, Writing, Mathematics, Learning Strategies, Service Orientation, Repairing, Persuasion, Equipment Maintenance, Negotiation, Systems Evaluation, Systems Analysis, Operations Analysis, Management of Material Resources, Technology Design, Management of Financial Resources, Science, Installation, and Programming are the three most important skills for people in the field.

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Bar Chart

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