Parental Occupational Choice and Children's Entry into a Stem Field

Albert Cheng, Katherine Kopotic, Gema Zamarro
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

We explore the intergenerational occupational transmission between parents and their children as it pertains to entry into the STEM field. Using the Education Longitudinal Study of 2002, we study student’s aspirations to work in a STEM field and eventual STEM education and employment. We show how these patterns change depending on whether the student’s parents work in a STEM field. We find strong effects of parental occupation type on student’s STEM outcomes that are heterogeneous by student gender. High school boys are more likely to aspire to work in STEM if one of their parents do so. By adulthood, both boys and girls have a higher probability of majoring and working in a STEM field if their parents also do, and in this case, estimated effects are stronger for girls despite a lack of effects on high school girls’ aspirations. For girls but not for boys, having a parent working in STEM increases the probability of entering the STEM field in adulthood above and beyond aspirations to enter the STEM field during adolescence.
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父母的职业选择与孩子进入Stem领域
我们探讨了父母和孩子之间的代际职业传递,因为它涉及到进入STEM领域。利用2002年的教育纵向研究,我们研究了学生在STEM领域工作的愿望,以及最终的STEM教育和就业。我们展示了这些模式如何根据学生的父母是否在STEM领域工作而变化。我们发现父母职业类型对学生STEM结果的强烈影响因学生性别而异。高中男生更有可能渴望在STEM领域工作,如果他们的父母中有一人这样做的话。到成年时,如果父母也这样做,男孩和女孩都有更高的可能性在STEM领域主修和工作,在这种情况下,尽管对高中女生的抱负缺乏影响,但估计对女孩的影响更大。对于女孩,而不是男孩,父母在STEM领域工作增加了成年后进入STEM领域的可能性,超出了在青春期进入STEM领域的愿望。
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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