For the record, social class is determined in this fashion, based on employment...
I'm almost done with a bachelor's degree in sociology and have never come across this definition, which I'm going to assume is an older one not much in use anymore. The models I've seen in my textbooks are closer to the ones on Wikipedia, which assign social class based on a consideration of education, income, and net worth. FYI, the contemporary concept of the underclass is more about a lack of steady employment, education, and privileges than it is about crime and welfare. I grew up underclass, nearly homeless, without constant access to basic "necessities" like electricity, water, heat, food, clothing, shelter, and education, but my parents were never on welfare (which takes resources they didn't have, like transportation, and more contact with the government than they wanted, because when you raise kids like this and want to keep them you
don't tell the government) and while they did engage in some criminal activity, they were the sort of ordinary crimes most college kids have engaged in at one time or another, and had cleaner records than most middle class people I know.
Ok, so. Me:
Gender: Female
Age: 29
Race: White
Profession: I'm currently making a living as an artist, but I want to get a degree in computer science.
Social Class: Born and raised underclass. Married into middle class. Currently working class.
Preferred sock color: I have a dwarfy love for socks and possess an entire drawer of them in different colors, patterns, and styles. I don't think I have any in single colors. My favorite pair are blue striped knee-highs.
Preferred way to kill a goblin: Brutal and quick, with an overpowered squad of candy-clad legendary sworddwarfs.