Cassandra Dorius
Iowa State University
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Featured researches published by Cassandra Dorius.
Journal of Family Issues | 2018
Camron Suzann Devor; Susan D. Stewart; Cassandra Dorius
Educational attainment is lower among children with divorced parents than those with continuously married parents. Most research has focused on the educational outcomes of children and little research has examined the effect of parental divorce on educational attainment beyond a bachelor’s degree. Using data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1997, we investigated how parental divorce affects young adult postbaccalaureate educational attainment, measured by graduate/professional school enrollment and attainment of a graduate/professional degree. We also examined the role of social capital, measured by parental educational expectations. Parental divorce was negatively associated with enrolling in a graduate/professional program and obtaining a degree. Parental educational expectations were positively related to children’s postbaccalaureate educational attainment, but the expectations of divorced and continuously married parents were similar and did not explain the negative effect of parental divorce. More work is needed to investigate explanations for lower postbaccalaureate educational attainment among children of divorce.
Archive | 2016
Cassandra Dorius; Karen Benjamin Guzzo
Abstract Purpose High rates of union dissolution and repartnering among parents means that today’s youth are increasingly likely to spend some time living with a stepparent. Although family structure has been linked to adolescent well-being, most work has compared those in stepfamilies with those in intact families, so it is not clear which aspects of stepfamily life are more or less consequential for adolescent behaviors among those exposed to a co-residential stepfamily. Methodology/approach To examine stepfamilies more closely, we focus explicitly on youth who had ever lived with a stepfather using mother and child data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979 (n = 1,754). We specifically explore how structure and stability, timing of exposure, and sibling configuration influence risk-taking, operationalized as sexual debut and drug use at age 16. Findings We find that timing and sibling composition seem to be unrelated to risk-taking, but stepfamily structure and stability are highly salient. Adolescents currently in a cohabiting stepfamily and those who have experienced the dissolution of a prior stepfamily are more likely to engage in sex (and sometimes use drugs) than their counterparts living with only their stepfather in a married-parent family. Originality/value The findings highlight the importance of stability, more so than structure, timing, or sibling configuration, in understanding adolescent risk-taking. The results provide further evidence that children in stepfamilies have unique vulnerabilities and opportunities for resilience, and should be evaluated independently from samples of children from intact families to avoid a deficit approach in modeling and theorizing.
Journal of Marriage and Family | 2014
Daphne C. Hernandez; Emily Pressler; Cassandra Dorius; Katherine Stamps Mitchell
Demographic Research | 2016
Karina M. Shreffler; Stacy Tiemeyer; Cassandra Dorius; Tiffany Spierling; Arthur L. Greil; Julia McQuillan
Journal of Marriage and Family | 2016
Daphne C. Hernandez; Emily Pressler; Cassandra Dorius
Population Research and Policy Review | 2016
Karen Benjamin Guzzo; Cassandra Dorius
Population Research and Policy Review | 2014
Wendy D. Manning; Pamela J. Smock; Cassandra Dorius; Elizabeth C. Cooksey
Child Care Quarterly | 2018
Cassandra Dorius
Children and Youth Services Review | 2018
Melissa Denlinger; Cassandra Dorius
Archive | 2016
Amelia Karraker; Cassandra Dorius