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成年早期的重度暴饮:父母的教育如何将大学状态的影响情境化

Heavy Episodic Drinking in Early Adulthood: How Parents' Education Contextualizes the Effects of College Status.

作者信息

Kuhl Danielle C, Burrington Lori A

机构信息

Department of Sociology, Center for Family and Demographic Research, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green, OH 43403.

Department of Sociology, Anthropology, Social Work and Criminal Justice, Oakland University, Rochester, MI 48309.

出版信息

Sociol Focus. 2020;53(1):29-52. doi: 10.1080/00380237.2019.1703864. Epub 2020 Jan 13.

Abstract

Young adults who transition to college are at particular risk of heavy episodic drinking (HED), as they consume more alcohol than their same-aged peers who do not attend college. Yet the link between college attendance and HED during young adulthood may vary depending on social class origins. Building on life course and socio-structural perspectives that suggest that status characteristics give meaning to role transitions in ways that shape young adults' drinking behavior, this study situates the risk of HED within the sociological context of educational attainment, and examines how parents' education conditions the relationship between young adults' college status and HED. We suggest that the odds of HED are higher when a young adult's college status is "off-diagonal"-incongruent with her/his parents' educational attainment. Using data from Waves I and III of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health for a sample of 13,526 young adults, stratified by sex, results indicate that being off-diagonal increases the odds of HED, but not for everyone. Females whose parents have higher levels of education but who themselves do not attend college, and those whose parents have low levels of education but who themselves attend four-year colleges, have higher odds of HED. The results for males show no significant interactions between parents' education and own college status. For both females and males, there are pronounced racial/ethnic differences in HED odds, after controlling for educational mismatch. Findings suggest that HED policies targeting the archetypal four-year-college attending male should be expanded to other groups.

摘要

刚进入大学的年轻人特别容易出现大量饮酒的情况(HED),因为他们比未上大学的同龄人饮酒量更多。然而,在青年时期,上大学与大量饮酒之间的联系可能因社会阶层出身而有所不同。基于生命历程和社会结构视角,这些视角表明地位特征以塑造年轻人饮酒行为的方式赋予角色转变以意义,本研究将大量饮酒的风险置于教育程度的社会学背景中,并考察父母的教育程度如何调节年轻人的大学状态与大量饮酒之间的关系。我们认为,当年轻人的大学状态与父母的教育程度“不一致”时,大量饮酒的几率会更高。使用来自全国青少年健康纵向研究第一波和第三波的数据,对13526名年轻人进行抽样,按性别分层,结果表明,处于“不一致”状态会增加大量饮酒的几率,但并非对所有人都是如此。父母教育程度较高但自己未上大学的女性,以及父母教育程度较低但自己上四年制大学的女性,大量饮酒的几率更高。男性的结果显示,父母的教育程度与自己的大学状态之间没有显著的相互作用。在控制教育不匹配因素后,无论女性还是男性,大量饮酒的几率在种族/族裔方面都存在显著差异。研究结果表明,针对典型的上四年制大学的男性的大量饮酒政策应扩大到其他群体。

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