Job prospects Conservation Education Officer in Ontario Green job Help - Green job - Help
Explore current and future job prospects for people working as a "conservation education officer" in Ontario or across Canada.
Job opportunities in Ontario
These outlooks were updated on November 29, 2023.
Prospects over the next 3 years
The employment outlook will be moderate for Conservation and fishery officers (NOC 22113) in Ontario for the 2023-2025 period.
The following factors contributed to this outlook:
- Employment growth will lead to a moderate number of new positions.
- Not many positions will become available due to retirements.
- There are a small number of unemployed workers with recent experience in this occupation.
Here are some key facts about Conservation and fishery officers in Ontario:
- Approximately 650 people worked in this occupation in May 2021.
- Conservation and fishery officers mainly work in the following sectors:
- Arts, entertainment and recreation (NAICS 71): 35%
- Provincial and territorial public administration (NAICS 912): 23%
- Forestry and logging and fishing, hunting and trapping (NAICS 113, 114, 1153): 13%
- Federal government public administration (NAICS 911): 13%
- Local, municipal, regional, aboriginal and other public administration (NAICS 913-919): 9%
- The distribution of full-time and part-time workers in this occupation is:
- Full-time workers: 89% compared to 81% for all occupations
- Part-time workers: 11% compared to 19% for all occupations
- 56% of conservation and fishery officers work all year, while 44% work only part of the year, compared to 63% and 37% respectively among all occupations. Those who worked only part of the year did so for an average of 41 weeks compared to 43 weeks for all occupations.
- The gender distribution of people in this occupation is:
- Men: 72% compared to 52% for all occupations
- Women: 28% compared to 48% for all occupations
- The educational attainment of workers in this occupation is:
- no high school diploma: less than 5% compared to 9% for all occupations
- high school diploma or equivalent: 24% compared to 25% for all occupations
- apprenticeship or trades certificate or diploma: less than 5% compared to 8% for all occupations
- college certificate or diploma or university certificate below bachelor's: 56% compared to 22% for all occupations
- bachelor's degree: 12% compared to 24% for all occupations
- university certificate, degree or diploma above bachelor level: less than 5% compared to 13% for all occupations
Breakdown by region
Explore job prospects in Ontario by economic region.
Legend
Source Labour Market Information | Prospects Methodology
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