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Showing 1 to 15 of 21 results Save | Export
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Ahearn, Caitlin E.; Brand, Jennie E.; Zhou, Xiang – Research in Higher Education, 2023
The college-educated are more likely to vote than are those with less education. Prior research suggests that the effect of college attendance on voting operates directly, by increasing an individual's interest and engagement in politics through social networks or human capital accumulation. College may also increase voting indirectly by leading…
Descriptors: College Attendance, Voting, College Graduates, Socioeconomic Status
Lin, Yuxin; Liu, Vivian Yuen Ting – Community College Research Center, Teachers College, Columbia University, 2019
Over one in three students who started college in 2012 did not enroll in the fall immediately following their high school graduation. Despite the prevalence of delayed college enrollment, however, little is known about its consequences for labor market outcomes. Using data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1997, this paper examines…
Descriptors: Enrollment, College Attendance, Time, Labor Market
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Monaghan, David B. – Journal of Higher Education, 2020
Though the diversification of pathways through higher education is widely recognized, little is known about longer-term patterns of undergraduate participation and attainment. I used sequence analysis to examine college-going across early and middle adulthood in nationally-representative data. Clustering of sequence data revealed four latent…
Descriptors: Nontraditional Students, Undergraduate Students, College Attendance, Time to Degree
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Schudde, Lauren; Bernell, Kaitlin – AERA Open, 2019
Although decades of research highlight the impact of schooling on earnings, less evidence exists regarding other employment outcomes. Nonwage labor market returns to education are important in the United States, where health insurance and retirement income are typically tied to employment. Using longitudinal, nationally representative data, we…
Descriptors: Educational Attainment, Labor Market, Education Work Relationship, Employment
Schudde, Lauren – Center for Analysis of Postsecondary Education and Employment, 2017
While research consistently finds positive earnings returns to educational attainment, there is little evidence on postsecondary education's impact on other employment-related outcomes. Yet nonpecuniary returns to schooling are particularly important in the United States, where fringe benefits are typically tied to employment and there is a great…
Descriptors: Postsecondary Education, College Attendance, Outcomes of Education, Labor Market
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Han, Hyojung; Rojewski, Jay W. – Journal of Research in Technical Careers, 2017
The purpose of this study was to identify latent classes of college-educated late-baby-boomer generation women's economic attainment (income) patterns during mid-career and examine the family and job satisfaction characteristics within each latent class. Longitudinal latent class analysis was used to analyze income data from the National…
Descriptors: Educational Attainment, Income, Females, Adults
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Aughinbaugh, Alison – Economics of Education Review, 2012
Using a sample of youth who graduated from high school in the late 1990s and early 2000s, this paper examines the impact of high school math curriculum on the decision to go to college. Results that control for unobserved differences between students and their families suggest that a more rigorous high school math curriculum is associated with a…
Descriptors: Secondary School Mathematics, College Attendance, High School Graduates, Probability
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Musick, Kelly; Brand, Jennie E.; Davis, Dwight – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2012
Educational expansion has led to greater diversity in the social backgrounds of college students. We ask how schooling interacts with this diversity to influence marriage formation among men and women. Relying on data from the 1979 National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (N = 3,208), we use a propensity score approach to group men and women into…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Student Diversity, Socioeconomic Background, Marriage
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Jez, Su Jin – Research in Higher Education, 2014
College is increasingly essential for economic and social mobility. Current research and public policy devotes significant attention to race, income, and socioeconomic factors in college access. Yet, wealth's role, as differentiated from income, is largely unexplored. This paper examines the differences between wealth and income in the…
Descriptors: Income, Fiscal Capacity, College Attendance, Two Year Colleges
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Doren, Catherine; Grodsky, Eric – Sociology of Education, 2016
Parental income and wealth contribute to children's success but are at least partly endogenous to parents' cognitive and noncognitive skills. We estimate the degree to which mothers' skills measured in early adulthood confound the relationship between their economic resources and their children's postsecondary education outcomes. Analyses of…
Descriptors: Family Income, Cognitive Ability, Mothers, Correlation
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Lovenheim, Michael F.; Reynolds, C. Lockwood – Journal of Human Resources, 2013
We use NLSY97 data to examine how home price variation affects the quality of postsecondary schools students attend. We find a $10,000 increase in housing wealth increases the likelihood of public flagship university enrollment relative to nonflagship enrollment by 2.0 percent and decreases the relative probability of attending a community…
Descriptors: College Choice, Housing, Costs, Real Estate
Belley, Philippe; Frenette, Marc; Lochner, Lance – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2011
This paper examines the implications of tuition and need-based financial aid policies for family income--post-secondary (PS) attendance relationships. We first conduct a parallel empirical analysis of the effects of parental income on PS attendance for recent high school cohorts in both the U.S. and Canada using data from the 1997 Cohort of the…
Descriptors: Family Income, Family Characteristics, Foreign Countries, Student Financial Aid
Saw, Guan – ProQuest LLC, 2016
This dissertation consists of three chapters that examine the effects of school and students improvement interventions. The first chapter investigates whether, for whom, and under which conditions high school mathematics and science course graduation requirements (CGRs) affect student achievement and educational attainment. Drawing on data from…
Descriptors: Educational Improvement, Student Improvement, Intervention, Program Effectiveness
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Brand, Jennie E.; Yu Xie, – American Sociological Review, 2010
In this article, we consider how the economic return to a college education varies across members of the U.S. population. Based on principles of comparative advantage, scholars commonly presume that positive selection is at work, that is, individuals who are most likely to select into college also benefit most from college. Net of observed…
Descriptors: College Attendance, Cohort Analysis, Longitudinal Studies, Salary Wage Differentials
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Haas, Steven A.; Fosse, Nathan Edward – Journal of Health and Social Behavior, 2008
This article examines the mechanisms linking health to the educational attainment of adolescents. In particular, it investigates the role of cognitive/academic achievement and a variety of psychosocial adjustment factors in explaining this relationship. Using data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1997 cohort (NLSY97), we estimate…
Descriptors: Family Characteristics, Educational Attainment, Adolescents, Health
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