Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
Dev Psychol. 2011 Mar;47(2):344-63. doi: 10.1037/a0021027.
Long hours of paid employment during high school have been linked to a variety of problem behaviors, but questions remain about whether and to what extent work intensity makes any causal contribution. This study addresses those questions by focusing on how 12th-grade work intensity is associated with substance use and educational attainment in the years following high school. It uses 2 nationally representative longitudinal data sets from the Monitoring the Future project, spanning a total of 3 decades. One data set tracks 8th graders for 8 years (modal ages 14-22) and provides extensive controls for possible prior causes; the second, larger data set tracks 12th graders for up to 12 years (to modal ages 29-30) and permits assessment of possible short-term and longer term consequences. Findings based on propensity score matching and multivariate regression analyses are highly consistent across the 2 sets of data. All findings show that more fundamental prior problems, including low academic performance and aspirations, make substantial contributions to substance use and long-term academic attainment (selection effects), but the findings also suggest that high work intensity during high school has long-term costs in terms of college completion and perhaps cigarette use.
高中时期长时间的有偿工作与各种问题行为有关,但仍存在一些问题,即工作强度是否以及在多大程度上产生任何因果贡献。本研究通过关注 12 年级的工作强度如何与高中毕业后的物质使用和教育程度相关,来解决这些问题。它使用了监测未来项目中的两个具有全国代表性的纵向数据集,总共跨越了 30 年。一个数据集跟踪了 8 年级学生 8 年(模式年龄为 14-22 岁),并为可能的先前原因提供了广泛的控制;第二个更大的数据集跟踪了 12 年级学生长达 12 年(至模式年龄 29-30 岁),并允许评估可能的短期和长期后果。基于倾向评分匹配和多元回归分析的研究结果在这两组数据中高度一致。所有研究结果都表明,包括低学业成绩和志向在内的更基本的先前问题对物质使用和长期学业成绩有很大贡献(选择效应),但研究结果还表明,高中时期高强度的工作会对大学毕业率产生长期影响,可能还会影响吸烟率。