Buckeye,
Like the GlueGuy, I'm sneaking up on an earth sheltered design for my new home, although I am considering a hybrid design, i.e. some earth sheltered spaces with 3-5 feet of dirt cover over elipsoidal domed "cathedral" ceilings and some conventional appearing spaces that are not conventional stud walls but instead are steel reinforced concrete using ICFs (Insulating Concrete Forms). I have looked into ICFs and followed their increasing popularity for years. I strongly recommend a poured basement using ICFs. Many advantages. You can easily do it yourself as the ICFs are light and easily cut. They are made of EPS (Expanded PolyStyrene).
Like the GlueGuy said, you can get someone to do the hard part, foundation/footer, pouring the floor if you aren't into large cement finishing jobs (I have a different take on that, see below...) Placing the ICFs is easy and suitable for DIY. Placing the rebar is easy and with bar ties and the twisting tools there isn't anything requireing beef. An angle grinder with a cut off blade will cut rebar if you don't happen to have a handheld electric/hydraulic rebar shear as I luckily do. Given the volume of concrete you will use, you should get a good deal on on a concrete pump for filling the ICFs. Do use a vibrator to avoid voids but don't get too agressive as a blowout is possible.
I've done concrete with conventional forms. I've done concrete by dry stacking blocks and 100% filling them with concrete but with luck I won't start any large projects via either method ever again. They are labor intensive. In the last couple weeks I have stacked nearly 10 tons of 40 pound blocks complaining the whole time that I was too stupid to get custom ICFs for the wall thickness I wanted (miminum of a foot thick). Half way through I noticed an offer by a ICF maker to provide custom widths.
Anyway, whether it is purchased labor or yours, there is a lot less of it with ICFs and you don't have to pull the forms as they stay behind as insulation. This is a GOOD system. There are even companion ceiling methods for pouring ceilings. GRRRRRRRRRR!!!!!!!! Tomorrow I get to start forming up to pour a foot thick ceiling. I will have a virtual railroad trestle of braced and cross braced wood to hold it up.
One last thought... Consider poured walls using ICFs.
Patrick