Once upon a time, college students could pay their tuition with a mix of family support, financial aid, and perhaps a little work. Today, family support and aid are woefully inadequate for a broad swath of undergraduates, and full-time work is common.
Is working while in college truly necessary? Are the earnings used for academic expenses related to postsecondary education, or are they frittered away on life’s pleasures? Since a handful of studies indicate a negative association between working long hours and rates of degree completion, these questions have taken on broader significance.
Unfortunately, few studies track students’ income and expenditures in systematic ways. To better understand spending patterns, and attempt to tease out the reasons for those patterns, one would ideally have longitudinal data collected for a large sample of students, and complemented by in-depth interviews with a subsample of students to delve more deeply into the reasons underlying decisions, and validate the measures employed. True confession: Together with Doug Harris, I am conducting just such a study right now, the Wisconsin Scholars Longitudinal Study. But that’s not why I’m writing this — we don’t yet have data to report on.
But apparently someone else does. A few weeks ago, a news outlet reported, under the headline “Will Work for Beer,” the release of a new study from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, published in the Journal of Population Economics. In that study the authors used national cross-sectional data and determined that the earnings students make from work are not enough to replace contributions from their parents, or cover tuition costs. According to the report, “We test several hypotheses regarding the financial motives for and academic effects of college student employment and find empirical support for the hypothesis that a decrease in parental transfers increases the work hours of four-year college students. We also find that an increase in the net price of schooling increases the number of hours worked by both four-year and two-year college students.”
Ok. So the decision to work may have something (but not everything) to do with how much support parents provide and how expensive college is. Unsurprising. Not particularly newsworthy.
But the lead author didn’t stop there. Instead, she waded into popular stereotypes about college students, telling the reporter that the results mean that the drive to work isn’t coming from a need to really make ends meet — instead, “students … work to have ‘beer money,’ money for entertainment, money to pay other expenses, just not their tuition.”
Huh?
Her conclusion took a gigantic interpretive leap from her data. Notably, it’s not a conclusion found anywhere in the actual research paper. All her evidence suggests is that students’ work isn’t generating income equivalent to parental contributions or in line with college costs. This could mean many things, including that students have a hard time finding enough work to generate sufficient earnings. Of course it suggests they likely need to find other ways to make ends meet — including loans. But it says nothing about what they use their work earnings for, how they prioritize expenses, what they go without, etc. With her statement to the press, the author did little more than simply impute meaning to meaningless results.
Why mention “beer money”? It’s not uncommon for an academic paper to simply say what it shows — and conclude that while we need to know more about explanations for patterns in the data, we just don’t have the information in the data set to tell us what we need to know. Why step outside those bounds, and lend fodder to the fire? In what way is this helpful — to policy makers, to students, or, frankly, to anyone?
Working students are often struggling students. There’s good qualitative evidence on this, even if the quantitative evidence isn’t yet available. Professors dislike them because they tend to fall asleep in class, having been up serving on the graveyard shift instead of studying. Their classmates often don’t know them well, since student-employees have little time left for socializing. Their grades are lower than average, their stress levels high, and their chances of degree completion relatively low. So why do we feel the need to minimize their need to work, to mock them for it, to enforce a stereotype that their earnings are spent at bars? It seems nothing less than classist — in the absence of providing students with sufficient financial supports to make working during college truly optional, we try and make ourselves feel better by telling stories that students work not out of true financial need, but rather a desire to imbibe.
Maybe that helps some fraction of folks sleep at night, but I seriously doubt it’s grounded in any kind of truth.


6 Responses to The Stories We Tell Ourselves
dank48 - October 23, 2009 at 11:21 am
The last time I faced a classroom, at least half of the students were clearly working. They did at least as well as those who apparently had all the time in the world. Come to that, I made better marks in the classes I took after graduation, when I was working and taking evening courses, than I did as an undergrad. I can’t see why people can’t leave their data alone, except that we just love to tell stories that make sense–however disconnected from reality that “sense” may be.
spflores - October 23, 2009 at 11:46 am
And compare such data/behavior via a social science perspective–”sociology”–such as Tim Clydesdale’s book The First Year Out: Understanding American Teens after High School (U Chicago P, 2007), where he studies closely teens’ lives, including financial patterns of work and consumption, during high school and especially during the first year out of high school (particularly in college).
evansrwe - October 23, 2009 at 11:59 am
I conducted a study (admittedly several years ago and restricted to one Big Ten institution) that indicated that those students who worked a nominal number of hours, up to 20 hours per week, as I recall, actually did better academically than comparable (SAT and HSR) non-working students. At the time, we attributed it to the need for better time management and/or the elusive motivation factor. Beyond the 20 hours per week, the employment appeared to have an increasingly negative effect on grades.
marvinlee - October 24, 2009 at 12:33 pm
The topic of student work, work necessity, and disposition of student income truly deserves a cogent study. I hope that the study will look deep and tease out the myriad complexities involved. I look forward to reading the forthcoming study by Sara Goldrick Rab and Doug Harris.
doctormommy - October 26, 2009 at 10:58 am
I had to work 40 hours a week when I was an undergraduate to cover my expenses (which did not include much beer…mostly food, rent, tuition that wasn’t covered by financial aid) and my grades definitely suffered…I finished with a 3.4 gpa; which was okay but low enough to keep me out of some graduate programs. When I’m hiring new employees fresh out of their undergraduate degrees I ALWAYS ask how much they worked while they were in school…even if they were just washing dishes, and I take that into consideration. A LOT of people don’t do this…certainly nobody else in my company did before I started doing it.
velvis - October 27, 2009 at 4:08 am
I too have conducted a study – it was one where I worked 40 hours a week for $6.50 an hour (I made it up to $8.50 as an assistant manager of a Kinko’s my senior year which was sadly almost a decade ago). I also pulled off going to college full time (12-15 credits depending on if I was taking Russian or not)and while the 3.24 held me short of the honors I deserved the understanding that sleep is more valuable than grades is something that still rings true. (I set my priorities and made my choices).My loan money went to the ridiculous out of state tuition and hundreds of dollars in books and supplies each semester and bus passes and to compensate for the semester of student teaching where I could only work 20 hours a week but still had full-time financial responsibilities. College students are not known for being consistent nor are they always the best decision makers so some times I just totally went out and blew portions of my rent money on stupid things like beer or even essentials like clothes and a haircut or even a bus ticket home but that was rare.I worked my rear off and honestly I hold my 3.24 has a badge of honor, which is something many of my friends who didn’t work while in college can’t say, as they didn’t graduate.