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Ethan Fosse; Fabian T. Pfeffer – Sociological Methods & Research, 2025
Over the past decade there has been a striking increase in the number of quantitative studies examining the effects of social mobility, with almost all based on the diagonal reference model (DRM). We make four main contributions to this rapidly expanding literature. First, we show that under plausible values of mobility effects, the DRM will, in…
Descriptors: Social Mobility, Models, Birth Rate, Statistical Analysis
Ashley Elaine Blake – ProQuest LLC, 2023
Even though teen pregnancy rates are declining, teen pregnancy remains a complex and problematic phenomenon in our culture. The problem addressed by this study was that although the number of births to teen mothers is decreasing, less than 50% of teen mothers are completing high school. The purpose of this qualitative, phenomenological study was…
Descriptors: Early Parenthood, Adolescents, Birth Rate, High School Graduates
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Jisun Jung – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2024
Most discussions of higher education research in the last four decades have focused on expanding higher education, including increasing access, equity, and quality. However, the growth of higher education enrolment has slowed in many advanced higher education systems since the achievement of massification, with enrolment declining more…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Birth Rate, College Enrollment, Public Policy
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George B. Richardson; Daniel Bates; Amy Ross; Hexuan Liu; Brian B. Boutwell – Developmental Psychology, 2024
Many developmental theories have not been sufficiently evaluated using designs that control for unobserved familial confounds. Our long-term goal is to determine the causal structure underlying associations between early environmental conditions and later psychosocial and health outcomes. Our overall objective in this study was to further evaluate…
Descriptors: Early Experience, Females, Individual Development, Sexuality
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Brita J. Fosse; Jane M. Tram; Ravneet K. Dhaliwal; Crystal C. Webb; Emily Kearns – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2024
Women seeking higher education frequently do so during peak childbearing years and women with higher levels of education are more likely to postpone motherhood until a later age. Fertility rate, defined as the average number of children born to a woman over her lifetime, has decreased globally. The decrease in birthrate has been partially…
Descriptors: Females, Graduate Students, Psychology, Behavioral Sciences
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Ilze Plavgo; Fabrizio Bernardi – Sociology of Education, 2024
This article expands the scope of comparative social stratification research in education to rapidly developing, largely low-income sub-Saharan Africa. First, we investigate trends in the association between parental socioeconomic status (SES) and children's chances to attend and complete primary education, exploring whether and where educational…
Descriptors: Educational Trends, Equal Education, Intergenerational Programs, Foreign Countries
Emily Hannum; Jeonghyeok Kim; Fan Wang – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2025
Demographic pressures are reshaping the challenges faced by primary education systems around the world in ways that carry significant implications for the landscape of global educational inequality. We first demonstrate highly disequalizing demographic pressures on the world's educational systems today: persistent expansionary pressures burden…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Equal Education, Foreign Countries, Enrollment
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Maylott, Sarah E.; Fasano, Regina M.; Moffitt, Jacquelyn M.; Boland, Cody L.; Burdette, Evan T.; Nahin, Erica R.; Simpson, Elizabeth A.; Delgado, Christine – Journal of Special Education, 2023
Developmental disability rates may vary by the season or month in which children are born. However, the seasonal mechanisms, such as climate, underlying these variations are unclear. Previous studies focused on high-latitude regions, leaving this climate hypothesis only partially tested. We analyzed rates of developmental disabilities in 3- to…
Descriptors: Developmental Disabilities, Birth Rate, Climate, Geographic Location
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Zori, Gaia; Foti, Steven; Hart, Mark – American Journal of Sexuality Education, 2022
Substantial evidence supports comprehensive sex education programs as effective means of promoting adolescent sexual health, but evidence on the effect of state-level sex education policy is inconclusive. Multiple states in the U.S. afford local authority in school policy, and existing literature calls for investigation of the impact of local…
Descriptors: Sex Education, Educational Policy, Adolescents, Program Effectiveness
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Zahra, Fatima; Haberland, Nicole; Psaki, Stephanie – Campbell Systematic Reviews, 2022
In this review, we will investigate the pathways linking education and health to understand why education appears to improve health in some settings or among certain populations, and not in others, as well as to inform recommendations about how best to target investments in education to maximize the benefits to health. We will seek to answer the…
Descriptors: Birth Rate, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS), Infant Mortality, Mortality Rate
Vogl, Tom – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2022
Sub-Saharan Africa exhibits higher fertility and lower education than other world regions. Economic and demographic theory posit that these phenomena are linked, with slow fertility decline connected to slow education growth among both adults and children. Using microdata from 33 African countries, this paper documents the co-evolution of adult…
Descriptors: Birth Rate, Educational Attainment, Adult Education, Females
Lars Kirkeboen; Edwin Leuven; Magne Mogstad; Jack Mountjoy – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2025
College graduates tend to marry each other. We use detailed Norwegian data to show that strong assortativity further arises by institution and field of study, especially among high earners from elite programs. Admission discontinuities reveal that enrollment itself, rather than selection, primarily drives matching by institution and field among…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Attraction, Marriage, College Programs, School Choice
Serena Canaan – W. E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research, 2024
School tracking is the practice of separating students into tracks or classrooms based on their academic achievement. While school systems around the world use tracking, some track more heavily than others. Tracking is controversial, as low-income students are more likely than high-income students to be placed in low-achieving classrooms or…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Track System (Education), Early Adolescents, Grouping (Instructional Purposes)
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Heather D. Tevendale; Lucas Godoy Garraza; Megan A. M. Brooks; Emilia H. Koumans; L. Duane House; Hope M. Sommerfeldt; Anna Brittain; Trisha Mueller; Taleria R. Fuller; Lisa Romero; Amy Fasula; Lee Warner – Prevention Science, 2024
The impact of community-wide teen pregnancy prevention initiatives (CWIs) on local U.S. birth rates among adolescents aged 15 to 19 years was examined using synthetic control methodology within a quasi-experimental design. CWIs were implemented in 10 U.S. communities from 2010 to 2015. Each initiative implemented evidence-based teen pregnancy…
Descriptors: Prevention, Adolescents, Pregnancy, Community Health Services
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Tara Emmers-Sommer – Journal of Women and Gender in Higher Education, 2025
This article examines women's post-secondary educational progress (e.g. undergraduate, graduate, law, medical) as related to career trajectories compared to those of men. Also addressed are challenges faced, particularly related to fertility, working in and outside of the home, the gender pay differential, and breadwinning as related to career and…
Descriptors: Females, Postsecondary Education, Undergraduate Students, Graduate Students
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