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Original Articles

Student employment and parental influences on educational and occupational aspirations of Greek adolescents

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Pages 421-449 | Published online: 22 Jan 2007
 

Abstract

This article focuses on the degree that students’ aspirations (educational and occupational) are linked to or affected by their working status, and other personal or family characteristics. By drawing data from a larger cross‐sectional study of the social and educational profile of students in primary and secondary education (ages 7–18), carried out in the Dodecanese region, in two phases (1995–96 & 2001–02), it examines the relationship between high school employment and the educational and trajectories of youth, as it is mediated and influenced by various personal (e.g. gender) and family (e.g. parental occupation) factors. Its main merit is the provision of comparative data from a country on which there is no research on youth employment to date, and the corroboration of a series of research findings at international level, relating to adolescence, adolescent employment and the school – work link. Before analysing the main data, a short description of the international bibliography on the particular issues is given, and a brief background on the research carried out in Greece about the youth employment is outlined.

Acknowledgements

The authors thank the editor and the anonymous reviewers for providing their useful comments.

Notes

1. The majority of those who graduate from faculties included in the second category suffer from job insecurity, underemployment, low wages, labour law violations, etc (see Eliou, Citation1976, Citation1984, Citation1991; Dimitropoulos et al., Citation1994; NSSG, various years).

2. For this variable we had information only for the 2001 sample, since there was no corresponding question in the 1995 questionnaire.

3. The chances are odds expressed in logarithmic scale (see Tabachnick & Fidell, 1996, ch. 12).

4. That is, if we examine data from the Labour Force Surveys of the National Statistical Service of Greece, as well as tax figures from the Ministry of National Economy.

5. For details see Polydorides (Citation1995a, Citation1995b, Citation1996) and Gouvias (Citation1998a, Citation1998b, Citation2002).

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