Vulnerable Youth and the Transition to Adulthood
July 2009
Principal Investigators:
Jennifer Macomber and Michael Pergamit
The Urban Institute
This Project Page is available on the Internet at:
http://aspe.hhs.gov/hsp/09/VulnerableYouth/
This project examined the role of different aspects of youth vulnerability
and risk-taking behaviors on several outcomes for young adults. The
data come from the National
Longitudinal Survey of Youth, 1997 cohort (NLSY97). The NLSY97,
funded by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, follows a sample of adolescents
in 1997 into young adulthood with annual interviews that capture their education,
employment, family formation, and other behaviors. The analyses in
this series use the subset of youth born in 1980-81, who were 15-17 years
old when first interviewed in 1997. Outcomes are obtained by using
the annual data through 2005 when these young adults were 23-25 years old.
Major findings from this project include:
-
Connectedness Trajectories of Youth: Trajectory analyses reveal
that youth follow one of four patterns in connecting to the labor market
and school between the ages of 18 and 24: consistently-connected,
later-connected, initially-connected, or never-connected. The study
also describes the factors associated with membership in each group, such
as participation in adolescent risk behaviors.
-
Employment and Education Outcomes for Second Generation Latino
Youth: Analyses suggest that second generation Latinos make a fairly
smooth transition to young adulthood and, after controlling for other factors,
make a better transition than white, black, and third generation Latino
youth. At the same time, they are less likely to engage in post-secondary
schooling than whites in young adulthood, which may contribute to a potential
gap in future earnings.
-
Young Adult Outcomes for Vulnerable Youth: For three groups
of potentially vulnerable youth (youth from low-income families, youth from
distressed neighborhoods, and youth with poor mental health) findings suggest
vulnerable youth have relatively high levels of participation in risky behaviors
as adolescents and relatively lower earnings and connectedness to the labor
market and school in early adulthood. The study also considers differences
in behaviors and outcomes between young men and young women as they transition
to adulthood, and findings suggest that differences between young men and
young women are related to the fact that some women are caring for children.
-
Multiple Pathways Connecting to School and Work,
Research Brief
-
Second-Generation Latinos, Connecting to School and
Work, Research Brief
-
Youth from Low-Income Families, Fact Sheet
-
Youth from Distressed Neighborhoods, Fact
Sheet
-
Youth with Depression/Anxiety, Fact Sheet
-
Young Men and Young Women, Fact Sheet
Where to?
Top of Page | Contents
Home Pages:
Human Services Policy
(HSP)
Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation
(ASPE)
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
(HHS)
Last updated: 08/11/2009