Back to Predicting Future Educational Attainment: Two New Measures and Their Validity

Through an analysis of the U.S. Department of Education’s High School Longitudinal Study, this article offers models of educational attainment that assess the explanatory value of four complementary measures. On the 11th grade survey instrument, questions are offered on both educational aspirations...

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Main Author: Stephen L. Morgan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2025-06-01
Series:Socius
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/23780231251346283
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author Stephen L. Morgan
author_facet Stephen L. Morgan
author_sort Stephen L. Morgan
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description Through an analysis of the U.S. Department of Education’s High School Longitudinal Study, this article offers models of educational attainment that assess the explanatory value of four complementary measures. On the 11th grade survey instrument, questions are offered on both educational aspirations and expectations, which is the first time since 1972 that both questions have been asked on a comparable longitudinal survey in the United States. The instrument then poses two questions that elicit probabilistic forecasts of future educational attainment, which have never been asked of high school students on such surveys. The empirical analysis in this article shows that the first two questions affirm the continuing relevance of the status socialization theory of educational attainment, and related empirical modeling that has been shaped by it, but the two new questions provide support for embracing more recent models that focus on belief formation and uncertainty.
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spelling doaj-art-07bbcbbf09c042ba8f2d485034eb03682025-08-20T03:31:12ZengSAGE PublishingSocius2378-02312025-06-011110.1177/23780231251346283Back to Predicting Future Educational Attainment: Two New Measures and Their ValidityStephen L. Morgan0Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USAThrough an analysis of the U.S. Department of Education’s High School Longitudinal Study, this article offers models of educational attainment that assess the explanatory value of four complementary measures. On the 11th grade survey instrument, questions are offered on both educational aspirations and expectations, which is the first time since 1972 that both questions have been asked on a comparable longitudinal survey in the United States. The instrument then poses two questions that elicit probabilistic forecasts of future educational attainment, which have never been asked of high school students on such surveys. The empirical analysis in this article shows that the first two questions affirm the continuing relevance of the status socialization theory of educational attainment, and related empirical modeling that has been shaped by it, but the two new questions provide support for embracing more recent models that focus on belief formation and uncertainty.https://doi.org/10.1177/23780231251346283
spellingShingle Stephen L. Morgan
Back to Predicting Future Educational Attainment: Two New Measures and Their Validity
Socius
title Back to Predicting Future Educational Attainment: Two New Measures and Their Validity
title_full Back to Predicting Future Educational Attainment: Two New Measures and Their Validity
title_fullStr Back to Predicting Future Educational Attainment: Two New Measures and Their Validity
title_full_unstemmed Back to Predicting Future Educational Attainment: Two New Measures and Their Validity
title_short Back to Predicting Future Educational Attainment: Two New Measures and Their Validity
title_sort back to predicting future educational attainment two new measures and their validity
url https://doi.org/10.1177/23780231251346283
work_keys_str_mv AT stephenlmorgan backtopredictingfutureeducationalattainmenttwonewmeasuresandtheirvalidity