TL;DR: Most students pick careers based on vibes, not data. BLS.gov is a free U.S. government resource that provides real salary data, job growth projections, and education requirements for 800+ occupations. Key insights: (1) fastest-growing jobs don’t always pay best, (2) top-paying careers require 8+ years of education, (3) you don’t always need a 4-year degree for a solid career. This guide shows you how to use BLS.gov’s three core tools—Occupational Outlook Handbook, Career Outlook magazine, and K-12 Classroom—to make data-driven career decisions.

Every student has been asked: “What do you want to be when you grow up?” Most answers come from parents, YouTube, or whatever sounds impressive at a dinner party. Almost none come from data.

That’s a problem, because the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS.gov) has been quietly building the most comprehensive, free career intelligence platform on the internet—and most students have never heard of it.

Let me walk you through what BLS.gov actually offers, the insights that surprised me, and how you can use it to make smarter decisions about your future—whether you’re choosing a college major, preparing for the job market, or just curious about what’s out there.

The Big Three: BLS Tools Every Student Should Know

1. Occupational Outlook Handbook (OOH)

This is the crown jewel. The OOH covers hundreds of occupations with detailed profiles for each one:

  • What you’d actually do (job duties—not the glamorous version, the real one)
  • What you’d earn (median pay, not averages that get skewed by outliers)
  • How many jobs exist (total employment numbers)
  • Whether jobs are growing or shrinking (projected growth rate 2024–2034)
  • What education you actually need (not what people assume, but what employers require)
  • What the work environment is like (office? outdoors? high-stress?)

The OOH is searchable by occupation name, and you can browse by pay range, education level, growth rate, or entry-level education. It’s like Zillow for careers.

2. Career Outlook

If the OOH is the database, Career Outlook is the magazine. It publishes articles that make BLS data actually interesting:

  • “You’re a what?” — profiles of unusual jobs you’ve never considered
  • “Interview with a…” — Q&A format with real workers about their career path
  • “Data on display” — visual charts showing employment trends
  • Feature articles — deep dives on topics like STEM careers, apprenticeships, and self-employment

This is where you discover that some of the most interesting careers are ones you didn’t know existed.

3. BLS K-12 Classroom

Specifically designed for students, this section includes:

  • Career exploration by interest — “I like science” or “I want to help people” → matching occupations
  • Periodic Table of STEM Occupations — a brilliant interactive tool modeled on the chemistry periodic table, but for careers. Each “element” is a STEM job with pay, growth rate, and education requirements.
  • Free videos and posters — actual free resources you can use for school projects or classroom walls

The Data That Should Change How You Think About Careers

I spent time digging through BLS data, and these are the insights that hit hardest:

Insight #1: Fastest-Growing ≠ Highest-Paying

The top 5 fastest-growing occupations (2024–2034) are:

Rank Occupation Growth Rate Median Pay
1 Wind turbine service technicians 50% $62,580
2 Solar photovoltaic installers 42% $51,860
3 Nurse practitioners 40% $129,210
4 Data scientists 34% $112,590
5 Information security analysts 29% $124,910

Notice something? The top two by growth rate pay roughly half of #3–5. Growth and pay are different signals. A field exploding with new jobs doesn’t automatically mean those jobs pay well.

For students: Don’t chase growth alone. Ask: “Is this career growing AND paying well, or just growing?” Data scientists and infosec analysts hit both. Wind turbine tech is growing fast but the pay tells a different story.

Insight #2: The Highest-Paying Jobs All Share One Requirement

The top 20 highest-paying occupations in the U.S. are almost entirely medical doctors and surgeons, all earning $239,200+ per year. The only non-medical occupation in the top 20? Airline pilots at $226,600.

What do all of these share? They require 8+ years of education and training after high school. There are no shortcuts to the very top of the pay scale.

For students: If you want to earn in the top 1%, you need to be realistic about the time commitment. Medical school isn’t just expensive—it’s a decade of your life. That’s not a reason not to do it, but it should be a conscious choice, not an accident.

Insight #3: You Don’t Always Need a 4-Year Degree

BLS’s own 2026 feature article highlights healthcare, science, and engineering careers that don’t require a 4-year degree. Some examples:

Career Education Required Median Pay
Chemical technicians Associate’s degree $57,790
Environmental science technicians Associate’s degree $49,490
Civil engineering technicians Associate’s degree $64,200
Information security analysts Bachelor’s degree $124,910

The “college or nothing” narrative is wrong. BLS data shows multiple viable paths—associate’s degrees, apprenticeships, certifications—that lead to solid careers without four years of tuition debt.

Insight #4: The STEM Periodic Table Reveals Hidden Gems

BLS’s interactive Periodic Table of STEM Occupations organizes ~100 STEM careers by discipline. Some surprises:

  • Computer & Information Systems Managers — $171,200 median pay, 15.2% growth, Bachelor’s degree. This is the “I like tech but don’t want to code 8 hours a day” path.
  • Information Security Analysts — $124,910 median pay, 28.5% growth (the highest growth in the entire table). Cybersecurity isn’t just hot—it’s the fastest-growing well-paid career in America.
  • Hydrologists — $92,060 median pay but negative growth (-0.1%). Even well-paid careers can be shrinking. Always check both pay and outlook.

How to Actually Use BLS.gov (Step-by-Step)

Step 1: Start With What You Like

Go to bls.gov/k12/students/careers. Pick your interest area—reading, science, building, helping people, etc. See what careers match.

Step 2: Read the Full OOH Profile

For each career that catches your eye, read the full OOH profile. Pay special attention to:

  • “How to Become One” — what education and training are actually required
  • “Job Outlook” — is this field growing or dying?
  • “Similar Occupations” — related jobs you might not have considered

Step 3: Cross-Reference With Real People

Read Career Outlook’s “Interview with a…” series. BLS gives you data; these interviews give you reality. What’s the day actually like? What surprised this person about the job? What would they have done differently?

Step 4: Check the STEM Periodic Table

Even if you don’t think of yourself as a “STEM person,” browse the periodic table. The “Computer Science” and “Mathematics” sections alone might change your mind about what STEM means—it’s not just lab coats and calculus.

Step 5: Compare Multiple Careers Side by Side

Don’t just research one career. Research five. Compare them on pay, growth, education requirements, and work environment. The best career decision is an informed one—not the first one that sounds interesting.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Is BLS.gov really free?

A: Yes, completely free. It’s a U.S. government website funded by taxpayer dollars. No subscription, no paywall, no registration required. All data is public and updated regularly.

Q: How often is BLS data updated?

A: Most data is updated annually, with some projections refreshed every two years. The Occupational Outlook Handbook is updated yearly, and employment statistics are released monthly. Always check the date on the page you’re reading.

Q: Can I trust BLS data?

A: BLS is a federal agency under the U.S. Department of Labor. It’s the official source for U.S. labor statistics and is widely cited by economists, policymakers, and researchers. It’s considered the gold standard for career and employment data in the United States.

Q: I’m in middle school. Is it too early to use BLS.gov?

A: Not at all. Middle school is the perfect time to start exploring. The K-12 Classroom section is specifically designed for students your age. Starting early gives you time to explore different paths before you need to make major decisions about high school courses or college majors.

Q: What if the career I want isn’t listed on BLS.gov?

A: BLS covers about 800 occupations, which covers most traditional careers. If you can’t find your exact dream job, look for related occupations. For example, “YouTuber” isn’t listed, but “Public Relations Specialists” and “Film and Video Editors” are—and they share many skills.

Q: Does BLS.gov include information about colleges or training programs?

A: BLS tells you what education is required for each career, but doesn’t recommend specific schools. Once you know you need a bachelor’s degree in computer science, for example, you can use other resources like College Board or Niche to find specific programs.

The One Chart Every Student Should See

BLS’s article on “Education Level and Projected Openings, 2024–34” shows something crucial: the relationship between education level and job availability.

The takeaway? More education generally means higher pay—but it also means fewer job openings. There are vastly more job openings requiring a high school diploma than a doctoral degree. This isn’t an argument against education. It’s a reminder that the job market is a balancing act between specialization (higher pay, fewer positions) and accessibility (lower pay, more positions).

Where you want to land on that spectrum is a personal decision—but it should be an informed one.

BLS.gov Won’t Pick Your Career—But It’ll Stop You From Picking a Bad One

The biggest mistake students make isn’t picking the wrong career—it’s picking one based on vibes instead of evidence. “My friend’s dad is a lawyer and he seems rich” is not a career strategy. “This TikToker says nursing is great” is not research.

BLS.gov gives you the evidence. It won’t tell you what to do with your life, but it will tell you:

  • Whether a career is growing or shrinking before you invest years preparing for it
  • What you’d realistically earn, not what the top 1% earns
  • What education you actually need, not what your neighbor’s cousin thinks
  • What the job is really like day-to-day

In a world of influencer career advice and anecdotal wisdom, BLS.gov is the antidote: free, comprehensive, and based on actual data from the U.S. government. It’s the career GPS you didn’t know you had.

Use it before you commit to a path. Your future self will thank you.


What career are you considering? Look it up on BLS.gov/OOH and tell me if the data surprised you—I bet it will.

#BLS #careerplanning #studentlife #careerexploration #STEM #futureofwork

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