학술논문

Wishing to work: New perspectives on how adolescents' part-time work intensity is linked to educational disengagement, substance use, and other problem behaviours.
Document Type
Article
Source
International Journal of Behavioral Development. Jul2003, Vol. 27 Issue 4, p301. 15p.
Subject
*TEENAGERS
*UNIVERSITIES & colleges
*TOBACCO
*SMOKING
*DRUG abuse
Language
ISSN
0165-0254
Abstract
This study examines interrelations among students' educational engagement, desired and actual school-year employment, substance use, and other problem behaviours. Cross-sectional findings from representative samples of 8th-, 10th-, and 12th-grade students in the United States, totalling over 300,000 respondents surveyed during the years 1992-1998, include the following: Large majorities of adolescents wish to work part-time during the school year, although most in earlier grades are not actually employed. Those who desire to work long hours tend to have low grades and low college aspirations; they are also more likely than average to use cigarettes, alcohol, and marijuana. Students' preferences for part-time work emerge at younger ages (i.e., earlier grades) than actual work, and the preferences show equal or stronger correlations with educational disengagement and problem behaviours. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]