Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://t2-4.bsc.es/jspui/handle/123456789/58274
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dc.creatorUniversity of London, Institute of Education, Centre for Longitudinal Studiesen
dc.date2014-03-06T15:35:20Zen
dc.identifier10.5255/UKDA-SN-7473-3-
dc.identifier7473-
dc.identifierhttp://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-7473-3-
dc.identifier.urihttps://t2-4.bsc.es/jspui/handle/123456789/58274*
dc.description<P>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</P><p>The <em>1970 British Cohort Study</em> (BCS70) began in 1970 when data were collected about the births and families of babies born in the United Kingdom in one particular week in 1970. Since then, there have been nine further full data collection exercises in order to monitor the cohort members' health, education, social and economic circumstances. These took place when respondents were aged 5 in 1975, aged 10 in 1980, aged 16 in 1986, aged 26 in 1996, aged 30 in 1999-2000 (SN 5558), aged 34 in 2004-2005, aged 42 in 2012 and aged 46 in 2016-18. A range of sub-sample and supplementary surveys have also been conducted, and a separate dataset covering response to BCS70 over all waves is available under SN 5641, <em>1970 British Cohort Study Response Dataset, 1970-2012.</em></p> <p>Further information about the BCS70 and may be found on the <a title="Centre for Longitudinal Studies" href="http://www.cls.ioe.ac.uk/">Centre for Longitudinal Studies</a> website. The content of BCS70 studies, including questions, topics and variables can be explored via the <a href="https://discovery.closer.ac.uk/item/uk.cls.bcs70/75fe4705-0c94-4f75-b1e6-ad9c61ffde26">CLOSER Discovery</a> website.&nbsp;<br> <br> <em>How to access genetic and/or bio-medical sample data from a range of longitudinal surveys:</em><br> A useful overview of the governance routes for applying for genetic and bio-medical sample data, which are not available through the UK Data Service, can be found at <a title="Governance of data and sample access" href="http://www.metadac.ac.uk/data-access-through-metadac/">Governance of data and sample access</a> on the METADAC (Managing Ethico-social, Technical and Administrative issues in Data Access) website.</p>en
dc.description<p>The <span style="font-style: italic;">1<span>970 British Cohort Study: Age 42, Sweep 9, 2012</span></span>, comprised two parts: a 'core' face-to-face interview and a paper self-completion questionnaire. The survey sought to update information gathered in previous surveys in order to explore the factors central to the formation and maintenance of adult identity in each of the following domains:</p> <ul> <li>lifelong learning</li><li>relationships, parenting and housing</li><li>employment and income</li><li>health and health behaviour</li><li>citizenship and values.</li></ul> The 2012 follow-up also included questions on a number of new topics that have either not previously been covered at all or not covered in adulthood, including: housing costs and housing equity; sexuality; cultural consumption - books, television, newspapers; religious beliefs - belief in God, belief in the after life; experience of the menopause; fertility intentions; diet - consumption of ready-meals, convenience foods, take-aways and home-cooked meals; sleep.<br><br><span style="font-style: italic;">Latest edition information</span><br>For the third edition (September 2022), a derived dataset (bcs70_age16_school_type) has been added, which includes age 16 school type data for the entire BCS cohort. This is derived from STYPE (BCS4), B9SC16TP (BCS9) and the 1986 School Census. A user guide describing this variable in full has also been added. In addition, five other data files have been updated with minor labelling updates (derived, flatfile, persongrid, relationships and unfolding).<br>en
dc.description<B>Main Topics</B>:<BR>en
dc.descriptionThe interview covered: lifelong learning; relationships, parenting and housing; employment and income; health and health behaviour; citizenship and values, housing costs and housing equity; sexuality; cultural consumption - books, television, newspapers; religious beliefs - belief in God, belief in the after life; experience of the menopause; fertility intentions; diet - consumption of ready-meals, convenience foods, take-aways and home-cooked meals; and sleep.en
dc.languageen-
dc.rightsCopyright Centre for Longitudinal Studiesen
dc.subjectSCHOOLSen
dc.subjectEDUCATIONAL COURSESen
dc.subjectFAMILY INCOMEen
dc.subjectSMOKINGen
dc.subjectSOCIAL SECURITY BENEFITSen
dc.subjectMARITAL STATUSen
dc.subjectSPOUSESen
dc.subjectPREGNANCYen
dc.subjectADOPTED CHILDRENen
dc.subjectFAMILIESen
dc.subjectHOURS OF WORKen
dc.subjectPARENTSen
dc.subjectCHRONIC ILLNESSen
dc.subjectHEARING IMPAIRMENTSen
dc.subjectCHILDRENen
dc.subjectHEALTHen
dc.subjectEMPLOYMENTen
dc.subjectOCCUPATIONAL QUALIFICATIONSen
dc.subjectHOUSEHOLDSen
dc.subjectEDUCATIONAL BACKGROUNDen
dc.subjectQUALIFICATIONSen
dc.subjectDEPRESSIONen
dc.subjectRESIDENTIAL MOBILITYen
dc.subjectINCOMEen
dc.subjectHOUSINGen
dc.subjectHOUSING TENUREen
dc.subjectFAMILY MEMBERSen
dc.subjectCOHABITATIONen
dc.subjectSEPARATED (STILL MARRIED)en
dc.subjectHOUSEHOLDERSen
dc.subjectAGEen
dc.subjectGENDERen
dc.subjectCHILD SUPPORT PAYMENTSen
dc.subjectRESIDENTIAL BUILDINGSen
dc.subjectROOMSen
dc.subjectRENTED ACCOMMODATIONen
dc.subjectMARITAL HISTORYen
dc.subjectDIVORCEen
dc.subjectPARTNERSHIPS (PERSONAL)en
dc.subjectSOCIAL SUPPORTen
dc.subjectCARE OF DEPENDANTSen
dc.subjectFINANCIAL RESOURCESen
dc.subjectECONOMIC ACTIVITYen
dc.subjectEMPLOYMENT HISTORYen
dc.subjectPROMOTION (JOB)en
dc.subjectSTATUS IN EMPLOYMENTen
dc.subjectOCCUPATIONSen
dc.subjectSUPERVISORY STATUSen
dc.subjectSUBSIDIARY EMPLOYMENTen
dc.subjectWORKPLACEen
dc.subjectWAGESen
dc.subjectTEMPORARY EMPLOYMENTen
dc.subjectSELF-EMPLOYEDen
dc.subjectFIELDS OF STUDYen
dc.subjectEMPLOYER-SPONSORED TRAININGen
dc.subjectPART-TIME COURSESen
dc.subjectILL HEALTHen
dc.subjectHEALTH CONSULTATIONSen
dc.subjectVISION IMPAIRMENTSen
dc.subjectDISABLED PERSONSen
dc.subjectDEBILITATIVE ILLNESSen
dc.subjectPHYSICAL MOBILITYen
dc.subjectCITIZENSHIPen
dc.subjectMORAL VALUESen
dc.subjectHOUSING FINANCEen
dc.subjectCULTURAL ACTIVITIESen
dc.subjectREADERSHIPen
dc.subjectTELEVISION VIEWINGen
dc.subjectMENOPAUSEen
dc.subjectRELIGIOUS BELIEFSen
dc.subjectTAKE-AWAY MEALSen
dc.subjectFAMILY PLANNINGen
dc.subjectFOOD AND NUTRITIONen
dc.subjectMEALSen
dc.subjectPACKETED FOODSen
dc.subjectSLEEPen
dc.subjectPAINen
dc.subjectEMOTIONAL STATESen
dc.subjectDISEASESen
dc.subjectALLERGIESen
dc.subjectDIABETESen
dc.subjectCANCERen
dc.subjectSKIN DISEASESen
dc.subjectEPILEPSYen
dc.subjectBACK PAINen
dc.subjectDIGESTIVE SYSTEM DISORDERSen
dc.subjectUROLOGIC DISEASESen
dc.subjectALCOHOL USEen
dc.subjectANTHROPOMETRIC DATAen
dc.subjectBEREAVEMENTen
dc.subjectBIRTH CONTROLen
dc.subjectHYSTERECTOMYen
dc.subject2012-2013en
dc.subjectGreat Britainen
dc.title1970 British Cohort Study: Age 42, Sweep 9, 2012en
dc.typeDataseten
dc.coverageGreat Britainen
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