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More religious teens graduate

Sociologists from Brigham Young University and Rice University found religiously-affiliated youth are 40% more likely to graduate high school than their unaffiliated peers and 70% more likely to enrol in college.

The researchers note that teens’ fellow church-goers are an important factor, serving as mentors who help teens set their sights high.

"Youth have a unique chance to form relationships with peers and mentors outside of their classroom at school or their neighbourhood at home," said Lance Erickson, the lead study author and a sociologist at BYU. "Mentors especially care for, counsel with and encourage youth throughout their growing years in a way that teachers and parents might not be able to."

How the study was done

Erickson and co-author James Phillips of Rice University studied data from more than 8 379 teens across the country. Some of their findings zeroed in on educational attainment by religious affiliations:

  • Catholic teens, mainline Protestants and black Protestant congregations are twice as likely as unaffiliated teens to finish high school and about 80 percent more likely to enrol in college.
  • Jewish and Mormon youths have the highest odds of graduating high school and college enrolment.

Religious participation, higher educational attainment

Leaders of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints have long emphasised to youth the importance of higher education as a means of seeking truth and becoming self-reliant. And according to data gathered by the Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life, that message gets through to Latter-day Saint youth.

The recent Pew data shows about one-third of LDS adults reared in the faith have graduated from college and another third have completed at least some college. By comparison, national data shows that 28% of Americans age 25 and above hold college degrees and 21% have completed some college.

And across all faiths, Erickson’s new study found that measures of religious participation and spirituality are positively associated with higher educational attainment. Church attendance, for example, was especially predictive of high school graduation, while prayer was more influential for college enrolment.

Interestingly, Erickson and Phillips found mentors with a religious background have essentially the same effect as educators who mentor students.

“Having a non-parent, adult figure who provides positive behavioural encouragement and that a teenager feels comfortable approaching is huge,” Phillips said. “Here we see just how far-reaching those religious mentorships are, even to the point of influencing college enrolment as effectively as mentors who are strictly from educational settings, such as teachers or coaches.”

(EurekAlert, November 2012)

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