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Published in: Demography 3/2017

11-04-2017

Back to School: Racial and Gender Differences in Adults’ Participation in Formal Schooling, 1978–2013

Author: Patrick Denice

Published in: Demography | Issue 3/2017

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Abstract

Trends and gaps in educational attainment by race and gender have received much attention in recent years, but reports of these trends have generally focused on traditional-age college students. Little is known about whether and how enrollment in formal schooling among older adults (between 29 and 61 years old) has changed over time. In this article, I draw on Current Population Survey data from 1978 to 2013 to provide the most comprehensive analysis of trends in adults’ formal school enrollment by demographic group to date. Results indicate that adult black women in particular have seen relatively high growth rates in their enrollment. Black women were 85 % more likely to enroll in 2011 and 46 % more likely in 2013 than they were in 1978. Their growing advantage relative to other racial-gender groups owes largely to their increasing educational attainment rates overall, given the relationship between prior schooling and enrollment later in life. Taken together, this article’s findings suggest that adult enrollment is at once equalizing and disequalizing. On the one hand, it has the potential to narrow the gaps between those with some college experience and those with a four-year degree. On the other hand, patterns of adults’ participation in formal education are widening educational gaps between those with and without traditional-age college experience.

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Appendix
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Footnotes
1
I use data provided by the Unicon Research Corporation (http://​www.​unicon.​com). Although the October supplement has been fielded since 1968, questions on school enrollment were posed to individuals ages 35 and older beginning in 1978. In other CPS monthly supplements, questions about enrollment are asked only of those 24 years and younger.
 
2
The cutoff age of 61 removes from the sample those who are most likely to be on the verge of retirement and thus, by definition, least likely to engage in educational activities that could be beneficial in the labor market (Elman and O’Rand 2007).
 
3
Additionally, the vocational school enrollment variable in the CPS does not appear to be complete or consistent over time, especially during the 1980s; multiple years have missing data (1982, 1985, 1986, and 1988), and enrollment rates during 1983–1984 are markedly different than prior and later years.
 
4
For households with more than one child, this variable records the age range of the youngest child.
 
5
In separate analyses, I tested whether different random-number draws affected the overall results; they did not, suggesting that the rank order from poor to affluent is roughly accurate in each year.
 
6
The 25 occupation categories are executive, administrative, and managerial; management-related; professional specialty; technicians and related support; financial sales and related; retail sales; administrative support; firefighting, police, and correctional institutions; farm operators and managers; other agricultural and related; mechanics and repairers; construction trades; extractive; precision production; machine operators, assemblers, and inspectors; transportation and material moving; and nine categories of service occupations: housekeeping and cleaning; protective service; food preparation and service; health care support; building and grounds cleaning and maintenance; personal appearance; recreation and hospitality; child care workers; and miscellaneous personal care and service. These occupation recodes are based on a system developed by Autor and Dorn (2013) (see also Dorn 2009) that reconciles the changes made to the census occupation classification scheme over time.
 
7
The census groups states into nine divisions: New England, Middle Atlantic, East North Central, West North Central, South Atlantic, East South Central, West South Central, Mountain, and Pacific. These divisions provide finer-grained geographic detail than the Census Bureau’s four regional groupings while avoiding the creation of cell sizes that are too small, as the use of states would when estimating models separately by race, gender, and time period.
 
8
Although not shown here, trends among Hispanic women and men generally follow the patterns of white men and women in Fig. 1 albeit at lower levels. Hispanic women’s enrollment rate held relatively steady between 3.5 % and 3.9 % over the study period, while Hispanic men’s rate fluctuated between 2.3 % and 3.0 %. Women and men in the “other” racial category evince relatively steep declines: women in this group saw their enrollment fall from an average of 6.8 % between 1979 and 1983 to 4.8 % between 2009 and 2013, and the men’s rate dropped from 8.1 % to 3.7 %.
 
9
The overall differences between black women and white women, between black women and white men, between white women and black men, and between white women and white men are statistically significant at p < .001; the difference between black women and black men is statistically significant at p < .05; and the difference between black men and white men is statistically significant at p < .10. I tested the significance of differences between the unstandardized coefficients using \( z=\frac{b_1-{b}_2}{\sqrt{se_{b_1}^2+{se}_{b_2}^2}} \) (Cohen and Cohen 1983).
 
10
Comparisons within racial-gender groups between other time periods and the period spanning 2008–2013, as well as comparisons between cohort categories, yield similar results.
 
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Metadata
Title
Back to School: Racial and Gender Differences in Adults’ Participation in Formal Schooling, 1978–2013
Author
Patrick Denice
Publication date
11-04-2017
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Demography / Issue 3/2017
Print ISSN: 0070-3370
Electronic ISSN: 1533-7790
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s13524-017-0570-6

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