TY - JOUR
T1 - Expectations about fertility and field of study among adolescents
T2 - A case of self-selection?
AU - Keijer, Micha G.
AU - Liefbroer, Aart C.
AU - Nagel, Ineke
PY - 2019/8/21
Y1 - 2019/8/21
N2 - In recent studies on the association between education and fertility, increased attention has been paid to the fi eld of study. Women who studied in traditionally more “feminine” fi elds, like care, teaching, and health, were found to have their children earlier and to have more children than other women. A point of debate in this literature is on the causal direction of this relationship. Does the fi eld of study change the attitudes towards family formation, or do young adults with stronger family-life attitudes self-select into educational fi elds that emphasize care, teaching, and health? Or do both fi eld of study preferences and family-life attitudes arise before actual choices in these domains are made? We contribute to this debate by examining the relationship between fertility expectations and expected fi elds of study and occupation among 14-17 year-old adolescents. We use data collected in 2005 from 1500 Dutch adolescents and Structural Equation Modelling (SEM) to examine the associations between expected fi eld of study and occupation and fertility expectations. Our results show that expectations concerning fertility and fi eld of study are already interrelated during secondary education. Both female and male adolescents who expect to pursue studies in fi elds that focus on care and social interaction (like health care, teaching etc.) are less likely to expect to remain childless. This holds equally for girls and boys. In addition, girls who more strongly aspire to an occupation in which communication skills are important also expect to have more children. We did not fi nd any relationship between expectations of pursuing a communicative fi eld of study and occupation and expectations of earlier parenthood. In addition, among boys, we fi nd that the greater their expectation of opting for an economics, a technical, or a communicative fi eld of study, the less likely they were to expect to remain childless. Boys who expected to study in the economic fi eld also expect to have their fi rst child earlier, but boys expecting to pursue a technical course of studies expect to enter parenthood later. We also found that those who expect to pursue cultural studies are more likely to have a preference for no children, or if they do want children, to have them later in life. Overall, our fi ndings suggest that the processes of elective affi nity between the communicative fi elds of study and work on the one hand and fertility on the other hand are more or less comparable for boys and girls. With respect to the other domains, we fi nd, apart from the gender differences in the relation between fi elds of study and childlessness, hardly or no gender differences in the expected timing of parenthood and the number of children. The genders do differ in their level of preference for communicative and economics-related fi elds of study and occupation, but if they do have the same preference, the association with fertility expectations is more or less similar.
AB - In recent studies on the association between education and fertility, increased attention has been paid to the fi eld of study. Women who studied in traditionally more “feminine” fi elds, like care, teaching, and health, were found to have their children earlier and to have more children than other women. A point of debate in this literature is on the causal direction of this relationship. Does the fi eld of study change the attitudes towards family formation, or do young adults with stronger family-life attitudes self-select into educational fi elds that emphasize care, teaching, and health? Or do both fi eld of study preferences and family-life attitudes arise before actual choices in these domains are made? We contribute to this debate by examining the relationship between fertility expectations and expected fi elds of study and occupation among 14-17 year-old adolescents. We use data collected in 2005 from 1500 Dutch adolescents and Structural Equation Modelling (SEM) to examine the associations between expected fi eld of study and occupation and fertility expectations. Our results show that expectations concerning fertility and fi eld of study are already interrelated during secondary education. Both female and male adolescents who expect to pursue studies in fi elds that focus on care and social interaction (like health care, teaching etc.) are less likely to expect to remain childless. This holds equally for girls and boys. In addition, girls who more strongly aspire to an occupation in which communication skills are important also expect to have more children. We did not fi nd any relationship between expectations of pursuing a communicative fi eld of study and occupation and expectations of earlier parenthood. In addition, among boys, we fi nd that the greater their expectation of opting for an economics, a technical, or a communicative fi eld of study, the less likely they were to expect to remain childless. Boys who expected to study in the economic fi eld also expect to have their fi rst child earlier, but boys expecting to pursue a technical course of studies expect to enter parenthood later. We also found that those who expect to pursue cultural studies are more likely to have a preference for no children, or if they do want children, to have them later in life. Overall, our fi ndings suggest that the processes of elective affi nity between the communicative fi elds of study and work on the one hand and fertility on the other hand are more or less comparable for boys and girls. With respect to the other domains, we fi nd, apart from the gender differences in the relation between fi elds of study and childlessness, hardly or no gender differences in the expected timing of parenthood and the number of children. The genders do differ in their level of preference for communicative and economics-related fi elds of study and occupation, but if they do have the same preference, the association with fertility expectations is more or less similar.
KW - Adolescent expectations
KW - Education
KW - Fertility
KW - Field of study
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85073452485&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85073452485&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.12765/CPoS-2019-11en
DO - 10.12765/CPoS-2019-11en
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85073452485
SN - 1869-8980
VL - 44
SP - 85
EP - 106
JO - Comparative Population Studies
JF - Comparative Population Studies
ER -