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The Education Longitudinal Study of 2002 (ELS:2002) is designed to monitor the transition of a national sample of young people as they progress from tenth grade through high school and on to postsecondary education and/or the world of work.
ELS:2002 has two distinctive features:
As a longitudinal study, ELS: 2002 follows a nationally representative cohort of students from the time they were high school sophomores through the rest of their high school careers. In 2004, the sample was augmented to make it representative of seniors as well. ELS:2002 continues to follow these students into postsecondary education and/or the labor market. These transitions are complex in that youth may follow many different pathways and prolonged in that the students will be followed until they are in their mid-to-late twenties. By surveying the same young people over time, it is possible to record the changes taking place in their lives and help to explain these changes—that is, understand the ways in which earlier achievements, aspirations and experience influence what happens to them later.
In the first year of data collection (the 2002 base year) ELS:2002 measured students' tested achievement and obtained information about their attitudes and experiences. These same students were surveyed and tested again, two years later in 2004 to measure their achievement gains in mathematics, as well as changes in their status, such as transfer to another high school, early completion of high school, or leaving high school before graduation. The third round of data collection is taking place in 2006 in areas such as high school completion, enrollment in postsecondary education, employment, and family formation. Cohort members will be followed a number of years thereafter so that later outcomes, such as their persistence and attainment in higher education, or their transition into the labor market, can be understood in terms of their earlier aspirations, achievement, and high school experiences.
As a study with many phases and components, ELS:2002 gathers information at multiple levels. Information has been obtained not just from students and their school records, but also from their parents, teachers, and administrators of their high school, including the principal and library media center director. The data collected from their teachers provides direct information about the student as well as the credentials and educational background information of the teacher. This multilevel focus supplies researchers with a comprehensive picture of the home, school, and community environments and their influences on the student.
Using this longitudinal, multilevel information, the base year (2002) and first follow-up (2004) of ELS:2002 helps researchers and policy makers to explore and better understand such issues as the importance of home background and parental aspirations for their child's success; the influence of different coursetaking paths; the effectiveness of different high schools, and whether their effectiveness varies with their size, organization, climate or ethos, curriculum, academic press, or other characteristics.
After the high school years, ELS:2002 continues to follow its sample of students into postsecondary education and the labor market. The next round of data collection is being conducted in 2006. For students who continue on to higher education, ELS:2002 will measure the effects of their high school careers on subsequent access to postsecondary institutions, their choices of institutions and programs, and as time goes on, their postsecondary persistence, attainment, and eventual entry into the labor force and adult roles. For students who go directly into the work force (whether as dropouts or high school graduates), ELS:2002 will measure how well high schools prepared these students for the labor market and how they fare in it.