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Showing 1 to 15 of 25 results Save | Export
Jessalynn James; Adam Maier – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2024
Using data from the National Longitudinal Study of Youth 1997, we examine differences in educational experiences and in social and economic mobility for youths experiencing poverty relative to their more affluent peers. We also explore the extent to which different educational experiences are associated with greater mobility for students…
Descriptors: Longitudinal Studies, National Surveys, Poverty, Social Mobility
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Whitaker, Stephan D. – Education Economics, 2023
Using the National Longitudinal Surveys of Youth (NLSY), this article examines the influence of a region's industrial composition on the educational attainment of children raised by parents who do not have college degrees. The NLSY's geo-coded panel allows for precise measurements of the local industries that shaped the parents' employment…
Descriptors: Educational Attainment, Parent Background, Social Mobility, Children
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Schneider, Daniel; Harknett, Kristen – Sociological Methods & Research, 2022
In this article, we explore the use of Facebook targeted advertisements for the collection of survey data. We illustrate the potential of survey sampling and recruitment on Facebook through the example of building a large employee--employer linked data set as part of The Shift Project. We describe the workflow process of targeting, creating, and…
Descriptors: Social Media, Data Collection, Advertising, National Surveys
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Setor, Tenace Kwaku; Joseph, Damien – Journal of Information Systems Education, 2021
The aims of the current study are twofold. First, we examine the relationship between specific modalities of career interventions and initial employment in IT. Specifically, we take a skills and social learning perspective to distinguish between direct and vicarious experiences of career interventions and relate these experiences to IT…
Descriptors: Information Technology, Employment Potential, Longitudinal Studies, National Surveys
Marissa Elena Thompson – ProQuest LLC, 2021
Why do Black men and women have such different average levels of educational attainment? One explanation may be inequalities in experiences with punishment through in-school suspensions, arrests, and incarcerations. Drawing on intersectional frameworks and theories of social control, I examine the long-term impacts of institutional punishment on…
Descriptors: Racism, Socioeconomic Background, Educational Opportunities, Access to Education
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Kim, Kyung-Nyun – Education and Urban Society, 2015
This study investigated the relation between building human capital of former dropouts and their occupational standing and the interaction effects with individual characteristics. By applying the growth curve model, this study highlighted the factors that lead high school dropouts to enhance their occupational standing. An increment in the work…
Descriptors: Dropout Characteristics, Dropout Programs, Dropout Research, Investigations
Song, Wei; Patterson, Margaret Becker – GED Testing Service, 2011
Ever since achieving a high school credential by passing the GED Tests became widely institutionalized through the adult education programs in the United States, the outcomes for GED credential recipients have continued to be of great interest to the adult education community and the general public. Does earning a GED credential bring positive…
Descriptors: High School Equivalency Programs, Dropouts, High School Graduates, Educational Status Comparison
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Fletcher, Edward C., Jr. – Career and Technical Education Research, 2012
Sparked by the current economic situation in the U.S., policymakers have begun to shift their concern from solely concentrating on the preparation of students for college to preparing them for the workforce as well. Thus, it is time for CTE to understand its impact on students' long-term trajectories. The purpose of this study was to predict…
Descriptors: Employment Level, Vocational Education, Secondary School Curriculum, Education Work Relationship
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Glied, Sherry; Neidell, Matthew – Journal of Human Resources, 2010
This paper examines the effect of oral health on labor market outcomes by exploiting variation in fluoridated water exposure during childhood. The politics surrounding the adoption of water fluoridation by local governments suggests exposure to fluoride is exogenous to other factors affecting earnings. Exposure to fluoridated water increases…
Descriptors: Employed Women, Labor Market, Water, Health Promotion
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Arum, Richard; LaFree, Gary – Sociology of Education, 2008
Little is known about the relationship between school characteristics, such as teacher-student ratios, and the risk of incarceration in adulthood. Educational skeptics argue that investment in schools has little effect on outcomes, such as criminality or the risk of incarceration, because criminal propensities are fixed at an early age and…
Descriptors: Social Control, Educational Attainment, Economic Opportunities, Educational Resources
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Greenwell, Lisa; Leibowitz, Arleen; Klerman, Jacob Alex – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1998
The influence of growing up in a welfare home on new mothers' chances of employment is investigated. Data are analyzed using logit and ordinary least-squares equations. Attitudes toward work and welfare are distinguished. Findings do not support a relationship between new mothers' employment and an intergenerationally transmitted welfare culture.…
Descriptors: Attitudes, Employment Opportunities, Family Influence, Mothers
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Solberg, Eric; Laughlin, Teresa – Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 1995
In estimating earnings equations for seven occupations, when fringe benefits are excluded, women receive significantly lower wages in all but the most female-dominated occupation. Including fringe benefits makes gender significant in only one occupational category. Crowding of one gender into an occupation appears the primary determinant of the…
Descriptors: Equal Opportunities (Jobs), Fringe Benefits, Occupational Segregation, Salary Wage Differentials
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Stoll, Michael A. – Urban Studies, 1998
Uses data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth and the U.S. Census of Industries (1982) to examine the growth in metropolitan job decentralization on the incidence and duration of joblessness among young males. Overall, growth in job decentralization negatively affects the employment patterns of young minority men. (SLD)
Descriptors: Blacks, Decentralization, Employment Opportunities, Hispanic Americans
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Lloyd, Kim M. – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2006
National Longitudinal Survey of Youth and census data are used to examine the effect of both individual- and contextual-level determinants on Latinas' transition to first marriage (n = 745). Hypotheses derived from 4 leading theories of marriage timing are evaluated. Discrete-time event-history models that control for clustering within Labor…
Descriptors: Probability, Marriage, Economic Opportunities, Labor Market
Murray, Charles – 1998
The importance of intelligence quotient (IQ) to income is analyzed using data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth, a study that began in 1979 with 12,686 subjects. Data for this study go through the 1994 interview wave, so that the most recent income data is for 1993. Statistical techniques are used to separate the influence of IQ from…
Descriptors: Economically Disadvantaged, Educational Policy, Equal Opportunities (Jobs), Genetics
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