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After-School Programs and Activities: 2005

NCES 2006-072
May 2006

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Table 5. Mean hourly out-of-pocket expense for current after-school arrangements that have any out-of-pocket expense for students in kindergarten through eighth grade, by type of arrangement and student and family characteristics: 2005
Hourly out-of-pocket expense by type of weekly nonparental after-school care arrangement1
Characteristic Number of
students (thousands)
Relative Nonrelative School- or
center-based
Total 5,863 $7.09 $9.30 $7.29
Student's grade
K–2 2,649 8.57 8.72 6.78
3–5 2,210 5.90 10.17 7.79
6–8 1,005 5.49 9.27 7.53
Student's sex
Male 3,154 8.18 11.40 7.25
Female 2,709 6.18 6.78 7.34
Student's race/ethnicity
White, non-Hispanic 3,100 7.00 10.18 7.12
Black, non-Hispanic 1,099 6.34 6.73 7.31
Hispanic 1,083 8.69 9.08 8.25
Asian or Pacific Islander, non-Hispanic 137 5.14 14.55 8.09
Other race, non-Hispanic2 445 6.73 6.39 6.01
Family type
Two parents 3,938 7.49 10.62 7.82
One parent 1,823 6.74 6.27 6.09
Nonparent guardian(s) 102 7.02 14.16! 5.53
Parents' language spoken most at home3
Both/only parent(s) speak(s) English 5,431 6.95 9.40 7.27
One of two parents speaks English 74 5.01 5.29 6.51
No parent speaks English 359 8.61 7.98 8.03
Mother's level of education4
Less than a high school diploma 277 14.12 4.37 6.45
High school/GED 1,363 8.08 5.40 5.78
Vocational/technical or some college 1,858 4.64 12.84 8.01
Bachelor's degree 1,214 6.21 9.09 6.60
Graduate or professional degree 912 9.04 10.36 8.51
Mother's school enrollment status4
Enrolled 766 10.67 14.99 7.07
Not enrolled 4,858 6.54 8.57 7.28
Mother's employment status4
35 or more hours per week 3,867 7.30 8.73 6.53
Less than 35 hours per week 1,023 6.61 12.15 10.40
Looking for work 195 3.20! 6.17 6.49
Not in the labor force 538 15.44! 10.57 7.17
Mother's work shift4,5
Regular shift 4,545 $7.51 $9.50 $7.19
Variable shift 345 4.30 8.48 8.60
Neighborhood conditions6
Concern regarding neighborhood
  health and safety conditions
1,101 5.56 7.21 7.11
No concern regarding neighborhood
  health and safety conditions
4,763 7.70 9.74 7.33
Household income
$25,000 or less 1,140 6.35 4.54 4.73
$25,001 to $50,000 1,394 6.68 6.61 5.91
$50,001 to $75,000 1,182 9.47 9.13 7.51
$75,001 to $100,000 858 4.61 15.74 7.25
$100,001 or more 1,289 8.46 13.50 9.70
Poverty status7
At or above poverty threshold 5,082 8.10 10.15 7.57
Below poverty threshold 781 4.53 4.43 4.50
! Interpret data with caution; coefficient of variation is 50 percent or more.
1 Estimates indicate out-of-pocket expenses per hour for after-school care of a given type, per student. For students with more than one arrangement of a given type, the expenses for each arrangement of that type are summed to calculate the total spent per hour for that type of after-school care.
2 “Other race, non-Hispanic” includes children who were multiracial and not of Hispanic ethnicity, or who were American Indian or Alaska Native, or were not Hispanic, White, Black, Asian, or Pacific Islander.
3 Complete descriptions of the categories for parents' language are as follows: (1) “Both/only parent(s) learned English as child(ren) or currently speak(s) English in the home,” (2) “One of two parents learned English as a child or currently speaks English in the home,” and (3) “No parent learned English as a child and both/only parent(s) currently speak(s) a non-English language in the home.”
4 Students without mothers living in the household are not included in estimates related to mother's education, enrollment, employment status, or work shift.
5 Work shifts were collapsed into two categories: regular and variable work shifts. A regular work shift is one with set hours. A variable shift is one that changes from days to evenings or nights regardless of whether the hours are set by the employer or the employee. The number of hours worked was not considered in the creation of this variable.
6 Parents or guardians respond “yes” or “no” to the question: “Are there any conditions in your neighborhood that make you worried about the health or safety of ((CHILD)/any of the children) in your household?”
7 Students are considered poor if they were living in households with incomes below the poverty threshold, which is a dollar amount determined by the federal government to meet the household's needs, given its size and composition.
NOTE: Estimates include students in kindergarten through eighth grade and not homeschooled, not older than 15 years, who have at least one weekly after-school care arrangement with some out-of-pocket expense. Students for whom no fee was charged, for whom another source paid the entire fee for after-school care, or for whom the period of time covered by the amount indicated (e.g., per hour, per week, etc.) could not be determined are exclude from the estimates. Detail may not sum to totals because of rounding.
SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, After-School Programs and Activities Survey of the 2005 National Household Education Surveys Program (ASPA-NHES: 2005).


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National Center for Education Statistics - http://nces.ed.gov
U.S. Department of Education