Department of Sociology, University of California-Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA, 90095-1551, USA.
Demography. 2011 Aug;48(3):863-87. doi: 10.1007/s13524-011-0034-3.
As college-going among women has increased, more women are going to college from backgrounds that previously would have precluded their attendance and completion. This affords us the opportunity and motivation to look at the effects of college on fertility across a range of social backgrounds and levels of early achievement. Despite a substantial literature on the effects of education on women's fertility, researchers have not assessed variation in effects by selection into college. With data on U.S. women from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979, we examine effects of timely college attendance and completion on women's fertility by the propensity to attend and complete college using multilevel Poisson and discrete-time event-history models. Disaggregating the effects of college by propensity score strata, we find that the fertility-decreasing college effect is concentrated among women from comparatively disadvantaged social backgrounds and low levels of early achievement. The effects of college on fertility attenuate as we observe women from backgrounds that are more predictive of college attendance and completion.
随着女性接受高等教育的人数增加,越来越多来自以前可能无法接受高等教育的背景的女性上了大学。这为我们提供了机会和动力,使我们能够在一系列社会背景和早期成就水平上观察大学对生育力的影响。尽管关于教育对女性生育力影响的文献很多,但研究人员并没有评估因选择上大学而导致的影响的变化。我们利用美国青年纵向调查 1979 年的数据,使用多层次泊松分布和离散时间事件历史模型,根据上大学和完成学业的倾向,考察了及时上大学和完成学业对女性生育力的影响。通过倾向得分分层来分解大学对生育力的影响,我们发现,在相对处于不利社会背景和早期成就水平较低的女性中,上大学对生育力的减少作用更为集中。随着我们观察到来自更能预测上大学和完成学业背景的女性,大学对生育力的影响会减弱。