Published April 17, 2023 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Trends in Parents' Time Investment at Children's Schools During a Period of Economic Change

  • 1. University of Chicago
  • 2. Georgetown University

Description

This paper examines changes from 1996–2019 in U.S. parents' time investment at their children's schools using data from the National Household Education Survey (N ≈ 116,000). The most common way parents spend time at their child's school is by attending a general school meeting, which rose from 76% to 85% over this period. The proportion who volunteered at school rose slightly over time (36% to 38%), whereas the frequency of participating in school activities decreased slightly. Little change emerged in the proportion who attend a PTA/PTO meeting (~50%), whereas the proportion who spent time fundraising decreased (60% to 54%). Differences in time investment between high- versus low-income parents either narrowed significantly (attended school meetings, frequency of participation) or remained stable (attended PTO/PTA meeting, volunteered) over time, except for income-based differences in time spent fundraising for their child's school, which grew significantly. We discuss factors possibly related to these narrowing and persistent gaps.

Files

Trends-in-Parents-Time-Investment-at-Childrens-Schools-During-a-Period-of-Economic-Change.pdf

Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1177/23328584231163862
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:10075

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Harris School of Public Policy Studies
Department(s)
Harris School of Public Policy Studies Research Publications