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xise xise
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Posts: 7
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7 years ago
Do you think this impact is the same for emerging adults attending college? If there is a limit on either number of hours worked each week OR number of classes someone takes while working “X” number of hours, what are those limits?
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Educator
7 years ago
Hi Xise, I found a resource for you that may help supplement your understanding:

The prevalence of secondary school students working part-time is linked to economic cycles: when there is an economic upturn, more students work; when economies are depressed, fewer work. Most students who work do so in low-paying service, clerical, or sales jobs, with some evidence that proportionately more students from middle-class families work than students from either poor or wealthy families. There appears to be a general view that there is a connection between working more than 15 to 20 hours per week and reduced school success in terms of academic achievement, as well as an increased risk of dropping out of school. However, it is not clear whether increased work causes the problems, or whether academic failure leads more students who are failing to increase their work hours.

[See the first URL]

The second URL is equally good.

Good luck on finals
Source  1) https://bctf.ca/publications/ResearchReports.aspx?id=5622
2) https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2936460/
xise Author
wrote...
7 years ago
thank you!!!
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