Better Late Than Never? Delayed Enrollment in the High School to College Transition

In this paper, we examine the antecedents and consequences of timing in the transition from high school to college. Using the National Education Longitudinal Study of 1988 (NELS:88), we find that 16 percent of high school graduates postpone enrollment by seven months or more after completing high school. Delayers tend to have some common characteristics: they come from families with few socioeconomic resources, they have performed poorly on standardized tests, they have dropped out of school, and they have exited high school with a GED. We find that even after controlling for these academic and socioeconomic characteristics, students who delay postsecondary enrollment have lower odds of bachelor degree completion. Additionally, we find that delayers are more likely than on-time enrollees to attend less than four-year institutions and to transition to other roles such as spouses or parents before entering college. Controlling for institutional context and life course contingencies, however, does not completely explain the negative relationship between delayed enrollment and degree completion.

[1]  Jerry A. Jacobs,et al.  Age and College Completion: A Life-History Analysis of Women Aged 15-44. , 2002 .

[2]  A. Pallas,et al.  Schooling in the Course of Human Lives: The Social Context of Education and the Transition to Adulthood in Industrial Society , 1993 .

[3]  H. Singer An Historical Perspective , 1995 .

[4]  A. Bachu Current Population Reports , 1999 .

[5]  William G. Axinn,et al.  The influence of school enrollment and accumulation on cohabitation and marriage in early adulthood. , 1995 .

[6]  M. Marini,et al.  Measuring the process of role change during the transition to adulthood , 1987 .

[7]  H. Gintis,et al.  Schooling and Achievement in American Society , 1977 .

[8]  R. Jessor,et al.  New perspectives on adolescent risk behavior: Author index , 1998 .

[9]  C. H. Persell,et al.  Chartering and Bartering: Elite Education and Social Reproduction , 1985 .

[10]  D. Hogan The Transition to Adulthood as a Career Contingency. , 1980 .

[11]  Ronald R. Rindfuss,et al.  Disorder in the life course: how common and does it matter? , 1987 .

[12]  Leila González Sullivan,et al.  National Profile of Community Colleges: Trends and Statistics, 4th Edition. , 2000 .

[13]  Laura W. Perna,et al.  Two Decades of Progress: African Americans Moving Forward in Higher Education. , 1999 .

[14]  Patricia M. McDonough,et al.  Choosing Colleges: How Social Class and Schools Structure Opportunity , 1999 .

[15]  Vincent Tinto,et al.  Leaving College: Rethinking the Causes and Cures of Student Attrition. , 1988 .

[16]  F. Furstenberg Review of Glen Elder, Children of the Great Depression: Social Change in Life Experience , 1975 .

[17]  Laura W. Perna Differences in the Decision to Attend College among African Americans, Hispanics, and Whites , 2000 .

[18]  James E. Rosenbaum Beyond College For All: Career Paths for the Forgotten Half , 2002 .

[19]  Dennis P. Hogan,et al.  Transitions and Social Change: The Early Lives of American Men , 1981 .

[20]  Susan P. Choy College Access and Affordability. , 1999 .

[21]  R. Turner Sponsored and Contest Mobility and the School System , 1960 .

[22]  James C. Hearn Emerging variations in postsecondary attendance patterns: An investigation of part-time, delayed, and nondegree enrollment , 1992 .

[23]  J. Teachman,et al.  Marriage, Parenthood, and the College Enrollment of Men and Women , 1988 .

[24]  D. Hogan,et al.  DEMOGRAPHIC TRANSITIONS AND THE LIFE COURSE: Lessons from Japanese and American Comparisons , 1988, Journal of family history.

[25]  Stephen Provasnik,et al.  The Condition of Education, 2002. , 2002 .

[26]  M. Shanahan,et al.  Pathways to Adulthood in Changing Societies: Variability and Mechanisms in Life Course Perspective , 2000 .

[27]  Jennie E. Raymond,et al.  Socioeconomic consequences of the process of transition to adulthood , 1989 .

[28]  Thomas M. Smith,et al.  The Condition of education , 1975 .

[29]  S. Schwartz,et al.  Leaving College: Rethinking the Causes and Cures of Student Attrition , 1987 .

[30]  William Sack,et al.  At the Threshold: The Developing Adolescent , 1992 .

[31]  J. Rosenbaum,et al.  The Social Prerequisites of Success: Can College Structure Reduce the Need for Social Know-How? , 2003 .

[32]  J. Rosenbaum College-For-All: Do Students Understand What College Demands? , 1997 .

[33]  Gladys Martinez,et al.  School Enrollment in the United States: Social and Economic Characteristics of Students, October 1999. Population Characteristics. Current Population Reports. , 2001 .

[34]  New perspectives on adolescent risk behavior: Life course capitalization and adolescent behavioral development , 1998 .

[35]  M. Marini,et al.  The Order of Events in the Transition to Adulthood. , 1984 .