The Academic Consequences of Employment for Students Enrolled in Community College. CCRC Working Paper No. 46.

M. Dadgar
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引用次数: 23

Abstract

College students are increasingly combining studying with paid employment, and community college students tend to work even longer hours compared with students at fouryear colleges. Yet, there is little evidence on the academic consequences of community college students’ term-time employment. Using a rare administrative dataset from Washington State that combines students’ quarterly transcript records with earning records from the state Unemployment Insurance system, this study relies on two causal strategies: first, an individual fixed effects strategy that takes advantage of the quarterly nature of the data to control for unobserved and time-invariant differences among students, and second, an instrumental variable–difference-in-differences framework that takes advantage of the fact that there is an exogenous supply of retail jobs during the winter holidays. The study compares academic outcomes in the fall and winter quarters for students who were more likely to work in retail and those less likely to work in retail based on pre-enrollment association with retail jobs. The findings reject the possibility of large negative effects for small increases in employment for community college students.
入读社区学院学生就业的学业后果。CCRC第46号工作文件
越来越多的大学生将学习与带薪工作结合起来,社区大学的学生比四年制大学的学生工作时间更长。然而,很少有证据表明社区大学生长期就业对学业的影响。本研究使用华盛顿州罕见的行政数据集,将学生的季度成绩单记录与州失业保险系统的收入记录相结合,依赖于两种因果策略:首先,个人固定效应策略利用数据的季度性来控制学生之间未观察到的和定常的差异,其次,一个工具变量-差异中的差异框架,利用冬季假期期间零售工作的外生供应这一事实。根据入学前与零售业工作的联系,该研究比较了秋季和冬季学期的学业成绩,比较了更有可能在零售业工作的学生和不太可能在零售业工作的学生。研究结果排除了社区大学学生就业率小幅增长带来巨大负面影响的可能性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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