University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
Rhodes College, Memphis, TN, USA.
J Youth Adolesc. 2020 May;49(5):1073-1091. doi: 10.1007/s10964-019-01162-4. Epub 2019 Nov 9.
Wealth plays a pervasive role in sustaining inequality and is more inequitably distributed than household income. Research has identified that wealth contributes to children's educational outcomes. However, the specific mechanisms accounting for these outcomes are unknown. Using the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID) and its supplements, SEM was used to test a hypothesized longitudinal chain of mediating processes. Framed by the parent investment model, this study tracks children and their parents over twenty-seven years, from pre-birth to early adulthood. The analytic sample was comprised of 1247 young people who were between 6-12 years of age (M= 5.66, SD= 2.12) in 1997, the first wave of the PSID's Child Development Supplement. This analytic sample was roughly equivalent by gender (N= 774; 53% identified as female and N= 693; 47% identified as male). The racial/ethnic background of participants was nearly an equal split between individuals who identified as White (N= 666; 45%) or Black (N= 634; 43%), with an additional 7% (N= 97) who identified as "Hispanic," 2% (N= 40) as "Other," 1% (N= 20) as Asian or Pacific Islander, and less than 1% (N= 6) who identified as American Indian or Alaskan Native. The results indicated that wealth (a) engenders parental and child processes-primarily expectations and achievement-that promote educational success, (b) plays a different role across the life course, and (c) that pre-birth wealth has a significant mediated relationship to educational attainment seventeen years later. These findings advance understanding of specific mediating mechanisms by which wealth may foster children's educational success across the life course, as well as how wealth may differentially shape educational outcomes in childhood, adolescence, and young adulthood.
财富在维持不平等方面发挥着普遍作用,其分配比家庭收入更为不均。研究已经发现,财富有助于儿童的教育成果。然而,具体的促成这些结果的机制尚不清楚。本研究使用收入动态面板研究(PSID)及其补充数据,采用结构方程模型(SEM)检验了一个假设的中介过程的纵向链。该研究以父母投资模型为框架,追踪了儿童及其父母 27 年,从出生前到成年早期。分析样本由 1247 名年轻人组成,他们在 1997 年(PSID 儿童发展补充资料的第一波)时年龄在 6-12 岁之间(M=5.66,SD=2.12)。这个分析样本在性别上大致相等(N=774;53%为女性,N=693;47%为男性)。参与者的种族/族裔背景几乎一半是自认为是白人(N=666;45%)或黑人(N=634;43%),另有 7%(N=97)自认为是“西班牙裔”,2%(N=40)自认为是“其他”,1%(N=20)自认为是亚洲或太平洋岛民,不到 1%(N=6)自认为是美洲印第安人或阿拉斯加原住民。结果表明,财富(a)产生了促进教育成功的父母和儿童过程——主要是期望和成就,(b)在整个生命周期中扮演着不同的角色,(c)出生前的财富与十七年后的教育程度有显著的中介关系。这些发现增进了对财富可能通过整个生命周期促进儿童教育成功的具体中介机制的理解,以及财富如何在儿童、青少年和青年期对教育成果产生不同的影响。