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Featured researches published by Caitlin Faas.


Journal of Youth Studies | 2013

Parent resources during adolescence: effects on education and careers in young adulthood

Caitlin Faas; Mark J. Benson; Christine E. Kaestle

Building on the Wisconsin Model of Status Attainment, this study examined the contextual process of obtaining educational attainment and the subsequent work outcomes and career satisfaction. This study used the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Add Health) with structural equation modeling techniques to assess US participants from adolescence to young adulthood (N = 8309). Socioeconomic resources provided by parents in adolescence directly predicted education outcomes and were partially mediated by family success expectations. Family success expectations were an important predictor of education outcomes. Neither socioeconomic resources nor success expectations directly predicted work outcomes or career satisfaction. Instead, education was the direct predictor of career satisfaction with work outcomes partially mediating. A multiple group analysis was conducted to compare outcomes between men and women. The discussion explores the implications of the findings and educational attainment for young adults in a global society.


Journal of Youth Studies | 2018

Socioeconomic success and mental health profiles of young adults who drop out of college

Caitlin Faas; Mark J. Benson; Christine E. Kaestle; Jyoti Savla

ABSTRACT Based on the developmental theories of life course and emerging adulthood, the current study examines a central question about the diversity of trajectories among young adults who drop out of college. The National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health) provides prospective data on a nationally representative sample of US young adults. Our subsamples include young adults who dropped out of college (Nu2009=u20091,530) and those who obtained a bachelor’s degree (Nu2009=u20091,977). We examined five dimensions of well-being: socio-economic success indicators, happiness/satisfaction, mastery, stress, and depression. Using latent class analysis, five classes of young adults who dropped out emerged that reflected variability in the patterns of well-being. Differences in socio-economic and mental health dimensions are elaborated in the study. The findings from this study provide valuable basis for challenging stereotypes about the college student dropout population.


Community, Work & Family | 2018

Implications of parents’ work travel on youth adjustment

Lorey A. Wheeler; Anisa M. Zvonkovic; Andrea R. Swenson; Caitlin Faas; Shelby C. Borowski; Ruth Nutting

ABSTRACT Guided by ecological, work–family spillover and crossover frameworks, this study examined mechanisms linking parental work travel (i.e. nights per year) to youth adjustment (i.e. externalizing and internalizing behaviours) through youth’s perceptions of parenting (i.e. knowledge, solicitation) with traveller and youth gender as moderators in a sample of 78 children in 44 two-parent families residing in the United States. The findings from multilevel analyses suggested that mothers’ travel nights predicted lower levels of maternal knowledge, with variation by traveller and youth gender. Mothers’ and fathers’ work travel and perceived parenting were predictors of youth’s externalizing behaviours, whereas only fathers’ work travel and perceived parenting were predictors of youth’s internalizing behaviours. Tests of indirect effects indicated that maternal work travel linked to youth’s externalizing behaviours through youth’s perceptions of maternal knowledge. These findings add to our limited understanding of work–family issues for parents who have the unique work demand of frequently travelling.


Teaching of Psychology | 2017

Effects of an Interteaching Probe on Learning and Generalization of American Psychological Association (APA) Style

Jonathan M. Slezak; Caitlin Faas

This study implemented the components of interteaching as a probe to teach American Psychological Association (APA) Style to undergraduate university students in a psychology research methods and statistics course. The interteaching method was compared to the traditional lecture-based approach between two sections of the course with the same instructor. Both teaching strategies significantly increased student performance on the APA Style knowledge relative to pretest performance, with a greater average increase and larger effect size for students exposed to interteaching methods. However, 2 months after the initial intervention, the application of APA Style knowledge to a draft of a research report resulted in no significant differences. Future research is warranted to determine conditions that result in enhanced generalization and retention of APA Style knowledge.


Contemporary Family Therapy | 2016

Interpersonal Neurobiology and Couple Relationship Quality: A Longitudinal Model

Laura Eubanks Gambrel; Caitlin Faas; Christine E. Kaestle; Jyoti Savla


Social Science Quarterly | 2016

Alignment of Educational and Occupational Expectations Influences on Young Adult Educational Attainment, Income, and Underemployment*

Sarah Schmitt-Wilson; Caitlin Faas


Journal of Family Theory and Review | 2017

The Bottle, the Breast, and the State: The Politics of Infant Feeding in the United States

Caitlin Faas


Archive | 2013

Emerging Adulthood Measured at Multiple Institutions 2: The Next Generation (EAMMi2)

Jon Grahe; Caitlin Faas; Holly M. Chalk; Hayley M Skulborstad; Christopher Barlett; Justin W. Peer; Anthony D. Hermann; Scott Hall; Tanya Sharon; Alan Reifman


Journal of Open Psychology Data | 2018

Emerging Adulthood Measured at Multiple Institutions 2: The Data

Jon Grahe; Holly M. Chalk; Leslie Cramblet Alvarez; Caitlin Faas; Anthony D. Hermann; Joseph P. McFall


Archive | 2016

Sampling Strategies PowerPoint

Alan Reifman; Jon Grahe; Laura Adams; Scott Hall; Justin W. Peer; Holly M. Chalk; Hayley M Skulborstad; Caitlin Faas; DeVere Dudley; Anthony D. Hermann

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Jon Grahe

Pacific Lutheran University

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Joseph P. McFall

State University of New York at Fredonia

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