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Showing 1 to 15 of 18 results Save | Export
Malkus, Nat – American Enterprise Institute, 2021
Young people who graduate from high school, get a job, and get married before having children, in that order, are far less likely to be in poverty and far more likely to have a solid footing in the middle class later in life. This path to adulthood has been dubbed the "success sequence." The cultural norms and values embedded in the…
Descriptors: Social Values, Success, Alienation, Teaching Methods
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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
Bhatia, Aparna – ProQuest LLC, 2013
This phenomenological study explored the impact of marital expectations and socio-economic status on post-secondary educational and professional goals of Northern California Asian Indian immigrant women both before and after marriage. For the purposes of this study, 15 Southeast Asian Indian immigrant women from the Sacramento metropolitan region…
Descriptors: Phenomenology, Immigrants, Marriage, Socioeconomic Status
Depaulo, Bella; Moran, Rachel F.; Trimberger, E. Kay – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
Over past decades, the demographics of the United States have changed markedly. The proportions of married and single people are changing; so too are the nature and functions of marriage and the family. However, people who are single, and perspectives not based on conventional marriage, remain underrepresented or misrepresented in scholarship and…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Ethnic Studies, Family Size, Global Approach
Nedleman, Mark D. – 1991
The pursuit of graduate studies can involve a substantial amount of personal effort, especially for married graduate students having to balance the demands of work and parenting, as well as a relationship with their spouse. This study was conducted to examine the amount of stress felt by married graduate students and to determine what student…
Descriptors: Employment, Graduate Students, Higher Education, Intervention
Fink, Ira Stephen; Cooke, Joan – 1973
Married students constitute a significant proportion of University of California students--one out of two graduate and one out of ten undergraduate students are married. Yet, little is known of the particular needs of married students and changes in this segment of the University population. This paper is concerned with measuring the changing…
Descriptors: College Housing, Day Care, Educational Planning, Higher Education
Sussman, Steve; And Others – 1983
Previous research on physical attractiveness stereotypes about marriage have used stimulus individuals in isolation. To examine these attractiveness stereotypes using couples as targets, 72 college students (36 females, 36 males) rated eight photographs of four male-female couple types. Members of each couple were either matched (attractive…
Descriptors: College Students, Conformity, Higher Education, Interpersonal Attraction
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Badgett, M. V. Lee – Academe, 1994
At most colleges and universities, fringe benefits are offered only to married faculty. Requiring marriage for benefit eligibility discriminates against all unmarried couples, homosexual or heterosexual. Resistance to providing benefits to unmarried couples is declining, but both gay and straight couples will have to lobby together for domestic…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Family (Sociological Unit), Fringe Benefits, Higher Education
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Ludlow, Larry H.; Alvarez-Salvat, Rose M. – Journal of Personnel Evaluation in Education, 2001
Studied the spillover between family and work by examining the link between marital status and work performance across marriage, divorce, and remarriage. A polynomial regression model was fit to the data from 78 evaluations of an individual professor, and a cubic curve through the 3 periods was statistically significant. (SLD)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Divorce, Family Influence, Higher Education
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Bisconti, Ann Stouffer – 1978
Marriage, childbearing, and employment patterns of women initially surveyed during their entrance to college in 1961 and subsequently surveyed in 1965, 1971, and 1974-5 were investigated. Subjects were questioned on marital status, number and timing of children in the family, employment patterns and shifts, job search patterns, preferred housework…
Descriptors: Career Choice, Child Care, Employment Patterns, Family Relationship
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Teachman, Jay D.; Polonko, Karen A. – Social Forces, 1988
Examines longitudinal data on college enrollment, marriage, and parenthood among 9,608 White high school graduates. Concludes that marriage and parenthood exert negative effects on the higher education of both men and women, with marriage being particularly detrimental to women's education. Contains 26 references. (SV)
Descriptors: College Attendance, Educational Research, Family Influence, High School Graduates
Meade, Nancy R. – 1993
This study was conducted to investigate the attitudes of undergraduate college students (N=168) toward a reported incident of domestic turbulence. The five independent variables investigated were gender, marital status, age, family structure, and personal experiences with abuse. Two scenarios were used; one contained a provocation statement by the…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Battered Women, Family Structure, Family Violence
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Salts, Connie J.; And Others – Adolescence, 1994
Marriage attitudes were correlated with gender and premarital sexual activity. Females exhibited more favorable attitudes toward marriage than did males. Virgins perceived marriage more positively than did nonvirgins who had multiple sex partners. No significance found between interaction of gender and virginity status. (RJM)
Descriptors: Adolescents, College Freshmen, Higher Education, Interpersonal Relationship
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Clark, Linda Nielsen – Journal of the NAWDAC, 1976
If women are to benefit to the fullest from new legislation and opportunities, an examination of many life styles is imperative. From the available literature, valuable data regarding the combination of marriage and career can be ascertained in an effort to facilitate the process for young women who choose this option. (Author)
Descriptors: Career Choice, Environmental Influences, Females, Feminism
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Fischer, Judith L.; And Others – Journal of Marriage and the Family, 1989
Examined most common transitions during young adulthood--marriage and career--among 422 university graduates and undergraduates with respect to descriptors of social networks. Marital status, career stage, and gender interacted in various ways as influences on network characteristics. Role changes from career entry and marriage seemed related to…
Descriptors: College Graduates, College Students, Education Work Relationship, Employment
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