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Desmond, Matthew, and Ruth N. López
Turley. 2009 (forthcoming). "The
Role of Familism in Explaining the Hispanic-White College Application
Gap." Social Problems
Compared to other ethnic and racial groups, Hispanic
youth are worse off in every available measure of educational achievement
and attainment at the primary, secondary, and postsecondary levels.
Using data from the Texas Higher Education Opportunity Project (2002),
we explore the degree to which students’ preferences to stay
home for college can help explain the low college application rates
of Hispanic students. Among high school seniors, we find that (1)
Hispanics are the most likely to report it is important to live at
home during college, even those with college-educated parents; (2)
net of other factors, students who indicate it is important to stay
home are significantly less likely to apply to college, especially
to selective institutions; and (3) taking account of the preference
to stay home significantly reduces the Hispanic-white gap in applying
to any college and a four-year college, and it makes the gap in applying
to a selective college disappear.
This project was funded by the Texas
Higher Education Opportunity Project, Princeton University
(made possible by the Ford & Spencer Foundations).
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