The Academic Consequences of Employment for Students Enrolled in Community College

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Date

2012-06-01

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Community College Research Center

Abstract

Community college students increasingly combine studying with paid employment, but there is little evidence on the academic consequences of students' term-time employment. Using an administrative dataset from Washington State that combines students' transcripts with earning records from the Unemployment Insurance system, this study relies on two causal strategies to understand the academic effects of student employment: 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 growth in retail jobs during the winter holidays.

Description

Keywords

Pell Grants, student financial aid, student loans, education, higher--government policy, labor market, social mobility

Citation