- Education
- Mental Health
- Journal Article
Associations Between Developmental Risk Profiles, Mental Disorders, and Student Absences Among Primary and Secondary Students in Australia
Published: 2021
Research consistently shows that higher-education participation has positive impacts on individual outcomes. However, few studies explicitly consider differences in these impacts by socio-economic background (SEB), and those which do fail to examine graduate trajectories over the long run, non-labor outcomes and relative returns. We address these knowledge gaps by investigating the short- and long-term socio-economic trajectories of Australian university graduates from advantaged and disadvantaged backgrounds across multiple domains. We use high-quality longitudinal data from two sources: the Australian Longitudinal Census Dataset and the Household, Income and Labour Dynamics in Australia Survey. Low-SEB graduates experienced short-term post-graduation disadvantage in employment and occupational status, but not wages. They also experienced lower job and financial security up to 5 years post-graduation. Despite this, low-SEB graduates benefited more from higher education in relative terms—that is, university education improves the situation of low-SEB individuals to a greater extent than it does for high-SEB individuals.
Tomaszewski, W., Perales, F., Xiang, N., & Kubler, M. (2019). Beyond Graduation: Socio-economic Background and Post-university Outcomes of Australian Graduates. Research in Higher Education, 1-19.
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Please see https://lifecoursecentre.org.au/publications/beyond-graduation-socio-economic-background-and-post-university-outcomes-of-australian-graduates/ for the latest version.
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