National Survey of College Graduates, (NSCG) , United States, 1993-2021
Principal Investigator(s): View help for Principal Investigator(s) National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics
Version: View help for Version V1
| Name | File Type | Size | Last Modified |
|---|---|---|---|
|
|
application/zip | 48 MB | 06/29/2025 10:08:AM |
|
|
application/zip | 52.2 MB | 06/12/2025 07:21:AM |
|
|
application/zip | 28.8 MB | 06/12/2025 07:22:AM |
|
|
application/zip | 56 MB | 06/12/2025 07:23:AM |
|
|
application/zip | 59.4 MB | 06/12/2025 07:24:AM |
|
|
application/zip | 77.5 MB | 06/12/2025 07:28:AM |
|
|
application/zip | 41.3 MB | 06/12/2025 07:29:AM |
|
|
application/zip | 63.5 MB | 06/12/2025 07:29:AM |
|
|
application/zip | 61.2 MB | 06/12/2025 07:32:AM |
Project Citation:
Project Description
Scope of Project
Methodology
Response rates. Response rates were calculated on complete responses, that is, from instruments with responses to all critical items. Critical items are those containing information needed to report labor force participation (including employment status, job title, and job description), college education (including degree type, degree date, and field of study), and location of residency on the reference date. The overall unweighted response rate was 61%; the weighted response rate was 61%. Of the roughly 161,000 persons in the 2023 NSCG sample, 94,606 completed the survey.
- Earned a bachelor’s degree or higher prior to 1 January 2022
- Are not institutionalized and reside in the United States or Puerto Rico as of 1 February 2023
- Are younger than 76 years as of 1 February 2023
- Were residing in the United States or Puerto Rico as of the ACS interview date
- Were noninstitutionalized as of the ACS interview date
- Had earned at least a bachelor’s degree as of the ACS interview date
- Would be under the age of 76 as of 1 February 2023
- Did not have an inaccurate name or incomplete address on the ACS data file
- Were a complete interview or temporarily ineligible during their initial NSCG survey cycle
- Would be under the age of 76 as of 1 February 2023
- During the 2021 NSCG survey cycle, did not refuse to participate and did not request to be excluded from future NSCG cycles
- Highest degree type (3 levels)
- Field of bachelor’s degree (7 levels)
- Occupation group (8 levels)
- Underrepresented minority status (2 levels)
- Recent degree status (2 levels)
- Nativity (U.S.-born or foreign-born) (2 levels)
- Returning sample from the 2021 NSCG who were originally selected from the 2015 ACS
- Returning sample from the 2021 NSCG who were originally selected from the 2017 ACS
- Returning sample from the 2021 NSCG who were originally selected from the 2019 ACS
- New sample selected from the 2021 ACS
- Adjustments to account for undercoverage of recent immigrants and undercoverage of recent degree-earners
- Adjustment for incorrect names or incomplete address information on the sampling frame
- Differential sampling rates
- Adjustments to account for non-locatability and unit nonresponse
- Adjustments to align the sample distribution with population controls
- Trimming of extreme weights
- Overlap procedures to convert weights that reflect the population of each frame (2015 ACS, 2017 ACS, 2019 ACS, and 2021 ACS) into a final sample weight that reflects the 2023 NSCG target population
Variance estimation. The successive difference replication method (SDRM) was used to develop replicate weights for variance estimation. The theoretical basis for the SDRM is described in Wolter (1984); Fay and Train (1995); Ash (2014); and Opsomer et al. (2016). As with any replication method, successive difference replication involves constructing numerous subsamples (replicates) from the full sample and computing the statistic of interest for each replicate. The mean square error of the replicate estimates around their corresponding full sample estimate provides an estimate of the sampling variance of the statistic of interest. The 2023 NSCG produced 320 sets of replicate weights.
Related Publications
Published Versions
Found a serious problem with the data, such as disclosure risk or copyrighted content? Let us know.
This material is distributed exactly as received from the data depositor. ICPSR has not reviewed, checked, or processed this material. For additional information about the study, please contact the investigator(s) directly. If you have questions about the accessibility of materials distributed by ICPSR or require further assistance, please visit ICPSR's Accessibility Center.