Attachment 9. Summary of Changes Introduced in GSS 2017-2019
1. Changes to the GSS code list and GSS-CIP crosswalk resulting from implementation of NCSES’ new Taxonomy of Disciplines
Broad fields were reorganized, with a net reduction in the number of broad fields:
Communication and Family and consumer sciences and human sciences become ineligible and were dropped;
Natural resources and conservation sciences were split from Agricultural Sciences as a new broad field; and
Neurobiology and neuroscience became subfields under Biology and biomedical sciences.
Subfields were reorganized, rendering some subfields ineligible, and leading to the addition of several newly eligible subfields:
These detailed fields were dropped: Anatomy 601; Biometry and epidemiology 604; Cell and molecular biology 607; Ecology 608; Entomology and parasitology 609; Sociology and anthropology 909; Public administration 913; Family and consumer sciences and human sciences 920 (except for the Human development subfields which will be moved under the Social sciences field); Communication 930; and Architecture 940.
These detailed fields were added: Environmental science and studies 510; Forestry, natural resources, and conservation 511; Biostatistics and bioinformatics 618; Cell, cellular biology, and anatomical sciences 619; Ecology and population biology 620; Epidemiology 621; Molecular biology 622; Biomedical sciences 623; and Human development 915.
These detailed fields previously reported under other fields are now collected separately: Biological and biosystems engineering 115; Nanotechnology 116; Materials sciences 205; Criminal justice - safety studies 911; International relations and national security studies 912; and Public policy analysis 914.
Some fields have name changes to better align with the CIP program titles. For example, Biological Sciences are now reported under Biological and Biomedical sciences; Earth, atmospheric, and ocean sciences are reported under Geoscience, atmospheric, and ocean sciences
2. Changes to data collection methods to improve data utility and mitigate response burden
Separate reporting of graduate student enrollment, demographic, and financial data for master's and doctoral students
Use of CIP codes, instead of GSS codes, for reporting GSS data; GSS codes are still allowed for reporting of postdocs and NFRs
Expanded coordinator use of file uploads for data submission instead of manual data entry into the GSS Web Instrument
3. Changes to institutional eligibility
To be consistent with HERD, for-profit institutions will be ineligible since they are typically not research institutions but rather focus on practitioner-oriented degrees.
File Type | application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document |
Author | Healey, Kaleen |
File Modified | 0000-00-00 |
File Created | 2021-01-13 |