The IRE Resource Center is a major research library containing more than 23,250 investigative stories — both print and broadcast. Add to that more than 3,000 tipsheets from our national conferences on how to cover specific beats or do specific stories and you have a resource that no reporter or editor should be without. These stories and tipsheets are searchable online or by contacting the Resource Center directly (573-882-3364 or rescntr@ire.org) where a researcher can help you pinpoint what you need. Browse or search the tipsheet section of our library below. Logged-in members can view the tipsheets free online:
Search results for "U.S. census data" ...
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The numbers don’t lie **If you read them really carefully
This is Campbell's Powerpoint presentation for the panel: Analyzing the past, present and future with U.S. Census data. He includes the pros and cons of using Census data as well as some tips for stories you can do using the Census.
Tags: census; data; story ideas
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Investigating Issues of Race and Poverty
Nixon discusses resources for investigating race and poverty. His list includes the U.S. Census Bureau, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, and immigration statistics.
Tags: race; poverty; statistics; data; sources; internet research
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Making the most of the U.S. Census Bureau's Factfinder
Guckian explains the uses of the U.S. Census Bureau's Factfinder and also gives information on how to find the information. Furthermore, she provides a detailed explanation of how to use the information in the American Community Survey (ACS).
Tags: Factfinder; Census data; interpreting data; American Community Survey (ACS)
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Recapturing History
Gebeloff uses a PowerPoint Presentation to show how to use IPUMS (Integrated Public Use Microdata), a website maintained by the University of Minnesota, to find trends. IPUMS uses data collected by the census but analyzes them in ways the official census has not published. He shows, for example, a table showing where self-employed Chinese who work in Manhattan live. This was not published by the Census.
Tags: U.S. Census; CAR; PUMS; IPUMS; data analysis; social trends; population trends.
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Sources for Covering Your Local Transit Agency
McGinty provides sources and what you can find by using them, such as the National Transit Database and Florida International University's database. Both contain dozens of spreadsheets with ridership information, revenue, crime data and so on. McGinty also lists some must-read documents for covering transit in your area.
Tags: Transportation; public transportation; U.S. census data; urban mobility; NTD; metropolitan transit
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Local Employment Dynamics (LED): New Information from the Census Bureau
Wu explains details about Local Employment Dynamics (LED), a new Census Bureau database used to track changes within the work force.
Tags: LED; Local Employment Dynamics; U.S. Census Bureau; Quarterly Workforce Indicators; industrial classification codes
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Investigating Agriculture: Down on the Farm
Stapleton provides ways to identify federal agencies that oversee farming. She has tips on understanding the regulations and regulators. The tipsheet tells where data can be obtained regarding violations, fines, penalties and suspensions. Stapleton provides agricultural information on pesticides, comparative analysis, politics, and labor. The tipsheet has links to websites that have important agricultural data. Additionally, the tipsheet has a printout from the U.S. Department of Labor which tells what information this agency collects.
Tags: agriculture; farmer; pesticide inspector; U.S. Department of Labor; wage and labor disputes; Migrant and Seasonal Workers Protection Act; Farm labor; contracting; transportation; housing regulations; politics; Social Security Administration; Labor; disability; pesticides; EPA's Worker's Protection Standards; United Farm Workers; National Agriculture Workers Survey; Wage and Labor violation data; Census of Agriculture
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Finding great stories in the Census
This tipsheet provides Web sites for finding Census data such as the U.S. Census Bureau and their population estimates division, the Economic Census and the American Community Survey.
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The American Community Survey -- "Census Data Every Year"
This tipsheet explains how the American Community Survery -- an every year Census -- will work. The program is planned to begin in 2003.
Tags: census; American Community Survery
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Downloading Data from American FactFinder
This tipsheet explains how to use the American FactFinder feature found on the U.S. Census website, www.census.gov.