创伤侵蚀教育成就的经济回报。

Open journal of educational research Pub Date : 2025-01-01 Epub Date: 2025-02-14 DOI:10.31586/ojer.2025.1199
Shervin Assari, Alexandra Donovan
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:受教育程度通常被认为是通往经济稳定和社会流动的途径。然而,少数群体收益递减(mdr)框架表明,教育程度对边缘化人群的各种经济、行为和健康结果的影响较弱,包括种族/少数民族、移民、LGBTQ+个人和生活在弱势地区的人。虽然mdr在各种边缘化人口群体中都有记录,但创伤在缓和社会经济结果中的作用仍未得到充分探讨。目的:本研究探讨终身创伤暴露是否会削弱教育程度与贫困收入比(PIR)之间的正相关关系,PIR是经济福祉的一个关键指标。方法:使用美国国家生活调查(NSAL)的数据,我们分析了全国代表性的6008名成年人样本,包括黑人、白人、拉丁裔和其他种族/民族群体。我们采用线性回归模型来评估自变量受教育程度与结果PIR之间的关系。然后,我们测试了终身创伤作为这种关联的调节因子。模型控制了年龄、性别、就业和种族/民族。结果:在所有组中,受教育程度与PIR呈正相关,但对于有终身创伤史的个体,这种关联的强度显着减弱。这些效应与协变量无关。结论:这些发现通过强调创伤是教育对社会经济福利回报降低的潜在因素,扩展了mdr框架。结构性不平等增加了少数群体的创伤暴露,也可能限制教育的经济效益,特别是对有多重创伤暴露的群体。旨在解决经济不平等问题的政策必须结合减少创伤和压力的社会政策。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Trauma Erodes Financial Returns of Educational Attainment.

Background: Educational attainment is often regarded as a pathway to economic stability and social mobility. However, the Minorities' Diminished Returns (MDRs) framework has demonstrated that the effects of educational attainment on various economic, behavioral, and health outcomes are weaker for marginalized populations, including racial/ethnic minorities, immigrants, LGBTQ+ individuals, and those living in disadvantaged areas. While MDRs have been documented for various marginalized demographic groups, the role of trauma in moderating socioeconomic outcomes remains underexplored.

Objective: This study examines whether lifetime trauma exposure diminishes the positive association between educational attainment and poverty-to-income ratio (PIR), a key indicator of economic well-being.

Methods: Using data from the National Survey of American Life (NSAL), we analyzed a nationally representative sample of 6,008 adults, including Black, White, Latino, and Other racial/ethnic groups. We employed linear regression models to evaluate the association between the independent variable educational attainment and the outcome PIR. We then tested lifetime trauma as a moderator of this association. Models controlled for age, gender, employment, and race/ethnicity.

Results: Educational attainment was positively associated with PIR across all groups, but the strength of this association was significantly attenuated for individuals with a history of lifetime trauma. These effects were independent of covariates.

Conclusions: These findings extend the MDRs framework by highlighting trauma as a potential contributor to diminished returns of education on socioeconomic well-being. Structural inequities that increase trauma exposure in minoritized populations may also limit the economic benefits of education, particularly for groups with multiple trauma exposures. Policies aimed at addressing economic inequality must integrate social policies that reduce trauma and stress.

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