Schley Sara, Walter Gerard G, Weathers Robert R, Hemmeter Jeffrey, Hennessey John C, Burkhauser Richard V
National Technical Institute for the Deaf, Rochester Institute of Technology, Rochester, NY 14623, USA.
J Deaf Stud Deaf Educ. 2011 Fall;16(4):524-36. doi: 10.1093/deafed/enq060. Epub 2011 Feb 2.
This article examines the effect that postsecondary education has on earnings and the duration of time spent in the Social Security disability programs for young persons who are deaf or hard of hearing. Our hypothesis is that investments in postsecondary training increase the likelihood of employment for persons who are deaf or hard of hearing and thus reduce dependency on disability-related income support programs. A longitudinal data set based upon records from the National Technical Institute for the Deaf and Social Security administrative records is used for this analysis. We find that those who graduate, even those who graduate with vocational degrees, experience significant earnings benefits and reductions in the duration of time spent on federal disability programs when compared with those who do not graduate with a degree. This finding suggests that reductions in the duration of time spent on Social Security programs are not limited to those with the highest level of scholastic aptitude and that investments in post-secondary education can benefit a broad group of deaf and hard-of-hearing persons. In addition, the data show that individuals who attend college, but withdraw before graduation, fair no better economically than individuals who never attended college.
本文探讨了高等教育对失聪或听力障碍青年的收入以及在社会保障残疾项目中花费的时间长度的影响。我们的假设是,对高等教育培训的投资增加了失聪或听力障碍者就业的可能性,从而减少了对与残疾相关的收入支持项目的依赖。本分析使用了一个基于国家聋人技术学院记录和社会保障行政记录的纵向数据集。我们发现,与未获得学位的人相比,那些毕业的人,即使是那些获得职业学位的人,在收入方面有显著的收益,并且在联邦残疾项目上花费的时间长度也有所减少。这一发现表明,在社会保障项目上花费时间长度的减少并不局限于学术能力最高的人,对高等教育的投资可以使广大失聪和听力障碍者受益。此外,数据显示,上了大学但在毕业前退学的人,在经济上并不比从未上过大学的人更好。