Literature DB >> 25774223

Parental Economic Hardship and Children's Achievement Orientations.

Jeylan T Mortimer1, Frank Lei Zhang1, Jeanette Hussemann2, Chen-Yu Wu1.   

Abstract

While children's orientations to achievement are strong predictors of attainments, little is known about how parental economic hardship during recessionary times influences children's orientations to their futures. The Youth Development Study has followed a community sample of young people in St Paul, Minnesota from mid-adolescence through their mid-thirties with near-annual surveys, and has recently begun surveying the children of this cohort. Using linked parent and child data, the present study examines the relationship between parental economic hardship and children's achievement orientations in the aftermath of the recent "Great Recession." Initial OLS analyses draw on 345 parent-child pairs, with data collected from parents during their adolescence, during the decade prior to the recession, and in 2011, and from their children (age 11 and older) in 2011. Then, first difference models are estimated, based on a smaller sample (N=186) of parents and children who completed surveys in both 2009 and 2011. Our findings indicate that when families are more vulnerable, as a result of low parental education and prior parental unemployment experience, children's achievement orientations are more strongly threatened by the family's economic circumstances. For example, as parental financial problems increased, economic expectations declined only among children of the least well-educated parents. Low household incomes diminished educational aspirations only when parents experienced unemployment during the ten years prior to the recent recession. Parental achievement orientations, as adolescents, were also found to moderate the impacts of shifts in the family's economic circumstances. Finally, boys reacted more strongly to their parents' hardship than girls.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Adolescent Vocational Development; Economic Expectations; Economic Hardship; Educational Aspirations; Great Recession; Parental Unemployment

Year:  2014        PMID: 25774223      PMCID: PMC4358300          DOI: 10.14301/llcs.v5i2.271

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Longit Life Course Stud


  7 in total

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Authors:  Jennifer C Lee; Jeylan T Mortimer
Journal:  Longit Life Course Stud       Date:  2009

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Authors:  Sarah J Beal; Lisa J Crockett
Journal:  Dev Psychol       Date:  2010-01

7.  Economic stress, coercive family process, and developmental problems of adolescents.

Authors:  R D Conger; X Ge; G H Elder; F O Lorenz; R L Simons
Journal:  Child Dev       Date:  1994-04
  7 in total
  7 in total

1.  Decline of "the American Dream"? Outlook toward the Future across Three Generations of Midwest Families.

Authors:  Jeylan T Mortimer; Arnaldo Mont'Alvao; Pamela Aronson
Journal:  Soc Forces       Date:  2019-11-15

2.  Reinforcement or Compensation? The Effects of Parents' Work and Financial Conditions on Adolescents' Work Values during the Great Recession.

Authors:  Monica Kirkpatrick Johnson; Jeylan T Mortimer
Journal:  J Vocat Behav       Date:  2015-04-01

3.  Adolescent adaptation before, during and in the aftermath of the Great Recession in the USA.

Authors:  Monica Kirkpatrick Johnson; Jeremy Staff; Megan E Patrick; John E Schulenberg
Journal:  Int J Psychol       Date:  2016-10-06

4.  Self-esteem and self-efficacy in the status attainment process and the multigenerational transmission of advantage.

Authors:  Kaspar Burger; Jeylan Mortimer; Monica Kirkpatrick Johnson
Journal:  Soc Sci Res       Date:  2019-10-22

5.  Agency, linked lives and historical time: evidence from the longitudinal three-generation Youth Development Study.

Authors:  Jeylan T Mortimer
Journal:  Longit Life Course Stud       Date:  2021-12-01

6.  Maternal and Paternal Resources across Childhood and Adolescence as Predictors of Young Adult Achievement.

Authors:  Xiaoran Sun; Susan M McHale; Kimberly A Updegraff
Journal:  J Vocat Behav       Date:  2017-03-08

7.  Can Locus of Control Compensate for Socioeconomic Adversity in the Transition from School to Work?

Authors:  Terry Ng-Knight; Ingrid Schoon
Journal:  J Youth Adolesc       Date:  2017-07-28
  7 in total

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