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Bender, Keith A.; Heywood, John S. – Education Economics, 2017
Using a panel data set of scientists in the US, we examine the hypothesis that workers in jobs poorly matched to their education are more likely to retire. In pooled estimates, we confirm that the mismatched are more likely to retire and that among retirees, the mismatched retire at younger ages. Hazard function estimates also support the…
Descriptors: Education Work Relationship, Scientists, Retirement, Hypothesis Testing
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Edwards, Ryan D. – Education Economics, 2016
The timing of education across the life cycle is differentially associated with older age health outcomes and socioeconomic status among military retirees, a subpopulation with common levels of adolescent health, but variation in educational timing. A year of education obtained before military service lowers the probability of poor health in…
Descriptors: Military Personnel, Retirement, Adults, Outcomes of Education
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Humble, Aine M.; Keefe, Janice M.; Auton, Greg M. – International Journal of Aging and Human Development, 2012
Using the concept of "retirement congruency" (RC), which takes into account greater variation in retirement decisions (low, moderate, or high RC) than a dichotomous conceptualization (forced versus chosen), multinomial logistic regression was conducted on a sample of caregivers from the 2002 Canadian General Social Survey who were…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Retirement, Decision Making, Personal Autonomy
Edwards, Ryan D. – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2010
There is a large and robust correlation between adult health and education, part of which likely reflects causality running from education into health. Less clear is whether education obtained later in life is as valuable for health as are earlier years of schooling, or whether education raises health directly or through income or wealth. In this…
Descriptors: Educational Attainment, Health Behavior, Probability, Retirement
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What Works Clearinghouse, 2012
This study examined whether being taught by a teacher with a high "value-added" improves a student's long-term outcomes. The study analyzed more than 20 years of data for nearly one million fourth- through eighth-grade students in a large urban school district. The study reported that having a teacher with a higher level of value-added…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Quasiexperimental Design, College Attendance, Pregnancy
Wheelwright, Verne; Gold, Jeff – Online Submission, 2007
Just as organizations use strategic planning to prepare for the future, individuals and the organization can benefit from personal strategic plans that consider future pathways within the organization as part of those plans. This research proposes a three-step approach to creating personal strategic plans that incorporates personal research,…
Descriptors: Strategic Planning, Careers, Retirement, Surveys
Nichols, Austin; Favreault, Melissa – Urban Institute (NJ1), 2009
Using data from the Health and Retirement Study (HRS), the authors consider how parental education relates to four separate outcomes in the children's generation: education, lifetime earnings, health and (financial) wealth. They relate parents' educational ranks to children's ranks on these four outcomes. By focusing on ranks, they are able to see…
Descriptors: Human Capital, Retirement, Outcomes of Education, Children