Ebook: Who Gets Ahead? The Determinants of Economic Success in America
Author: Christopher Jencks et al.
- Genre: Economy
- Tags: economics sociology socioeconomic status income intelligence education family background genetics measurement error twin study sibling study race noncognitive ability occupational status test scores Project Talent PSID Kalamazoo Brothers Veterans National Longitudinal Survey (NLS) Occupational Changes in a Generation (OCG-II) US Current Population Survey 1964 veterans NORC Brothers Survey Productive Americans Survey Taubman Twin Ten Talent Personalit
- Year: 1979
- Publisher: Basic Books
- Language: English
- djvu
Contributors: Christopher Jencks, Susan Bartlett, Mary Corcoran, James Crouse, David Eaglesfield, Gregory Jackson, Kent McClelland, Peter Mueser, Michael Olneck, Joseph Schwartz, Sherry Ward, Jill Williams
To what extent does a man's economic success depend on his family background, his academic ability, his personality traits, or his schooling? Drawing on 11 surveys conducted over more than a decade, Christopher Jencks and his colleagues provide the most comprehensive analysis of this question ever attempted. This is the book that answers the questions first raised in Jencks's immensely influential and controversial 1972 book on the impact of educational opportunity, _Inequality_, which was widely hailed as the most important book on the subject.
_Who Gets Ahead?_ demolishes virtually all the simple, one factor explanations of economic success that have been popular over the years. At the same time it shows that by taking enough factors into account - personality characteristics, family background, teachers' judgements about leadership ability, and, most importantly, length of schooling - much of the enormous complexity of individual careers can ultimately be explained.
Christopher Jencks and his colleagues have produced a major work which is indispensable for anyone attempting to understand or formulate economic or social policy today.
A revised version of "The effects of family background, test scores, personality traits, and schooling on economic success" by C. Jencks and L. Rainwater published by the National Technical Information Service, 1977.
To what extent does a man's economic success depend on his family background, his academic ability, his personality traits, or his schooling? Drawing on 11 surveys conducted over more than a decade, Christopher Jencks and his colleagues provide the most comprehensive analysis of this question ever attempted. This is the book that answers the questions first raised in Jencks's immensely influential and controversial 1972 book on the impact of educational opportunity, _Inequality_, which was widely hailed as the most important book on the subject. _Who Gets Ahead?_ demolishes virtually all the simple, one factor explanations of economic success that have been popular over the years. At the same time it shows that by taking enough factors into account - personality characteristics, family background, teachers' judgements about leadership ability, and, most importantly, length of schooling - much of the enormous complexity of individual careers can ultimately be explained. Christopher Jencks and his colleagues have produced a major work which is indispensable for anyone attempting to understand or formulate economic or social policy today. A revised version of "The effects of family background, test scores, personality traits, and schooling on economic success" by C. Jencks and L. Rainwater published by the National Technical Information Service, 1977.
To what extent does a man's economic success depend on his family background, his academic ability, his personality traits, or his schooling? Drawing on 11 surveys conducted over more than a decade, Christopher Jencks and his colleagues provide the most comprehensive analysis of this question ever attempted. This is the book that answers the questions first raised in Jencks's immensely influential and controversial 1972 book on the impact of educational opportunity, _Inequality_, which was widely hailed as the most important book on the subject. _Who Gets Ahead?_ demolishes virtually all the simple, one factor explanations of economic success that have been popular over the years. At the same time it shows that by taking enough factors into account - personality characteristics, family background, teachers' judgements about leadership ability, and, most importantly, length of schooling - much of the enormous complexity of individual careers can ultimately be explained. Christopher Jencks and his colleagues have produced a major work which is indispensable for anyone attempting to understand or formulate economic or social policy today. A revised version of "The effects of family background, test scores, personality traits, and schooling on economic success" by C. Jencks and L. Rainwater published by the National Technical Information Service, 1977.
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