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      Twelfth-grade student work intensity linked to later educational attainment and substance use: new longitudinal evidence.

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          Abstract

          Long hours of paid employment during high school have been linked to a variety of problem behaviors, but questions remain about whether and to what extent work intensity makes any causal contribution. This study addresses those questions by focusing on how 12th-grade work intensity is associated with substance use and educational attainment in the years following high school. It uses 2 nationally representative longitudinal data sets from the Monitoring the Future project, spanning a total of 3 decades. One data set tracks 8th graders for 8 years (modal ages 14-22) and provides extensive controls for possible prior causes; the second, larger data set tracks 12th graders for up to 12 years (to modal ages 29-30) and permits assessment of possible short-term and longer term consequences. Findings based on propensity score matching and multivariate regression analyses are highly consistent across the 2 sets of data. All findings show that more fundamental prior problems, including low academic performance and aspirations, make substantial contributions to substance use and long-term academic attainment (selection effects), but the findings also suggest that high work intensity during high school has long-term costs in terms of college completion and perhaps cigarette use.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Dev Psychol
          Developmental psychology
          American Psychological Association (APA)
          1939-0599
          0012-1649
          Mar 2011
          : 47
          : 2
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA. jbachman@umich.edu
          Article
          2010-26142-001 NIHMS272315
          10.1037/a0021027
          3061345
          21171751
          d821f56a-cfdd-4a2d-9ae5-09ac7d3af48c
          History

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