An assessment of the effects of changing family circumstances on the size and diversity of future military accessions

Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited. === This thesis examines the relationship between changing family circumstances and the educational outcomes of children, and derives the implications of changes in family background on the quality and diversity of future military recruiting po...

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Main Authors: Weis, Jeffrey S., Van Steenbergen, Alvin J.
Other Authors: Cook, Mike D.
Language:en_US
Published: Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10945/8000
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spelling ndltd-nps.edu-oai-calhoun.nps.edu-10945-80002015-06-17T15:57:43Z An assessment of the effects of changing family circumstances on the size and diversity of future military accessions Weis, Jeffrey S. Van Steenbergen, Alvin J. Cook, Mike D. Mehay, Stephen L. Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited. This thesis examines the relationship between changing family circumstances and the educational outcomes of children, and derives the implications of changes in family background on the quality and diversity of future military recruiting pools. The data sources for this thesis were the Panel Study of Income Dynamics, maintained and published by the University of Michigan, and the March Current Population Surveys, maintained and published by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. We estimated the effect of family background variables such as family income, parental education levels, and number of siblings, on the likelihood of children either completing high school or attending college. We then used these relationships to simulate the rates of high school completion and college attendance for nationally representative samples of children selected from the March 1974/1975 and 1993/1994 Current Population Surveys. The results indicate that today's children from white families will likely complete high school at lower rates but attend college at somewhat higher rates, as compared to people who were children in the early 197Os. Today's children who are growing up in minority families will likely graduate from high school at lower rates, and today's black and Hispanic children who do complete high school will be less likely to attend college, again compared to children from the 197Os. These trends suggest that military recruiters will likely have more difficulty recruiting from among all youth for enlistment, and may have less success in finding minority officers 2012-08-09T19:18:02Z 2012-08-09T19:18:02Z 1997-03 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10945/8000 en_US Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
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language en_US
sources NDLTD
description Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited. === This thesis examines the relationship between changing family circumstances and the educational outcomes of children, and derives the implications of changes in family background on the quality and diversity of future military recruiting pools. The data sources for this thesis were the Panel Study of Income Dynamics, maintained and published by the University of Michigan, and the March Current Population Surveys, maintained and published by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. We estimated the effect of family background variables such as family income, parental education levels, and number of siblings, on the likelihood of children either completing high school or attending college. We then used these relationships to simulate the rates of high school completion and college attendance for nationally representative samples of children selected from the March 1974/1975 and 1993/1994 Current Population Surveys. The results indicate that today's children from white families will likely complete high school at lower rates but attend college at somewhat higher rates, as compared to people who were children in the early 197Os. Today's children who are growing up in minority families will likely graduate from high school at lower rates, and today's black and Hispanic children who do complete high school will be less likely to attend college, again compared to children from the 197Os. These trends suggest that military recruiters will likely have more difficulty recruiting from among all youth for enlistment, and may have less success in finding minority officers
author2 Cook, Mike D.
author_facet Cook, Mike D.
Weis, Jeffrey S.
Van Steenbergen, Alvin J.
author Weis, Jeffrey S.
Van Steenbergen, Alvin J.
spellingShingle Weis, Jeffrey S.
Van Steenbergen, Alvin J.
An assessment of the effects of changing family circumstances on the size and diversity of future military accessions
author_sort Weis, Jeffrey S.
title An assessment of the effects of changing family circumstances on the size and diversity of future military accessions
title_short An assessment of the effects of changing family circumstances on the size and diversity of future military accessions
title_full An assessment of the effects of changing family circumstances on the size and diversity of future military accessions
title_fullStr An assessment of the effects of changing family circumstances on the size and diversity of future military accessions
title_full_unstemmed An assessment of the effects of changing family circumstances on the size and diversity of future military accessions
title_sort assessment of the effects of changing family circumstances on the size and diversity of future military accessions
publisher Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10945/8000
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