EN
Incarcerated mothers and fathers: How their absences disrupt children's high school graduation
Abstract
The United States is faced with a growing number of children who have incarcerated parents and nearly one quarter of children who fail to complete high school. It has been shown that parental incarceration negatively impacts academic outcomes. This study examined whether parental incarceration affects children’s high school graduation. Data on 12,418 young adults was drawn from the Add Health Wave IV dataset. Logistic regression analyses examined differences between maternal and paternal incarceration and the effects of chronicity of incarceration. Whereas both were found to reduce the likelihood that children will complete high school, maternal incarceration had a greater impact. This study fills gaps in the literature examining differences in parental incarceration. Practice and policy implications are discussed.
Keywords
References
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Details
Primary Language
English
Subjects
-
Journal Section
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Publication Date
May 1, 2015
Submission Date
-
Acceptance Date
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Published in Issue
Year 2015 Volume: 2 Number: 2
APA
Huynh-hohnbaum, A.- luu, Bussell, T., & Lee, G. (2015). Incarcerated mothers and fathers: How their absences disrupt children's high school graduation. International Journal of Psychology and Educational Studies, 2(2), 1-11. https://doi.org/10.17220/ijpes.2015.02.001
AMA
1.Huynh-hohnbaum A luu, Bussell T, Lee G. Incarcerated mothers and fathers: How their absences disrupt children's high school graduation. IJPES. 2015;2(2):1-11. doi:10.17220/ijpes.2015.02.001
Chicago
Huynh-hohnbaum, Anh-luu, Tim Bussell, and Gi Lee. 2015. “Incarcerated Mothers and Fathers: How Their Absences Disrupt Children'S High School Graduation”. International Journal of Psychology and Educational Studies 2 (2): 1-11. https://doi.org/10.17220/ijpes.2015.02.001.
EndNote
Huynh-hohnbaum A- luu, Bussell T, Lee G (May 1, 2015) Incarcerated mothers and fathers: How their absences disrupt children's high school graduation. International Journal of Psychology and Educational Studies 2 2 1–11.
IEEE
[1]A.- luu Huynh-hohnbaum, T. Bussell, and G. Lee, “Incarcerated mothers and fathers: How their absences disrupt children's high school graduation”, IJPES, vol. 2, no. 2, pp. 1–11, May 2015, doi: 10.17220/ijpes.2015.02.001.
ISNAD
Huynh-hohnbaum, Anh-luu - Bussell, Tim - Lee, Gi. “Incarcerated Mothers and Fathers: How Their Absences Disrupt Children'S High School Graduation”. International Journal of Psychology and Educational Studies 2/2 (May 1, 2015): 1-11. https://doi.org/10.17220/ijpes.2015.02.001.
JAMA
1.Huynh-hohnbaum A- luu, Bussell T, Lee G. Incarcerated mothers and fathers: How their absences disrupt children's high school graduation. IJPES. 2015;2:1–11.
MLA
Huynh-hohnbaum, Anh-luu, et al. “Incarcerated Mothers and Fathers: How Their Absences Disrupt Children'S High School Graduation”. International Journal of Psychology and Educational Studies, vol. 2, no. 2, May 2015, pp. 1-11, doi:10.17220/ijpes.2015.02.001.
Vancouver
1.Anh-luu Huynh-hohnbaum, Tim Bussell, Gi Lee. Incarcerated mothers and fathers: How their absences disrupt children's high school graduation. IJPES. 2015 May 1;2(2):1-11. doi:10.17220/ijpes.2015.02.001