Carrie Wright
Kenyon College
4 Papers
Carrie Wright is an academic researcher from Kenyon College. The author has contributed to research in topics: Educational attainment & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 1 publications.
Chat about Author
Papers
If “Boys Will Be Boys,” Then Girls Will Be Victims? A Meta-Analytic Review of the Research That Relates Masculine Ideology to Sexual Aggression
TL;DR: In this article, a meta-analysis across 11 different measures of masculine ideology was conducted to determine how strongly each index was associated with sexual aggression, including acceptance of aggression against women and negative, hostile beliefs about women.
512
Aspirations Are Not Enough: Barriers to Educational Attainment for Youth Involved with Child Welfare
Christina Dimakosa,Colleen Loomis,Blaise Y. O’Malley,Sylvie L. Lamont,Gurmakh Singh,Janette Pelletier,Brian D. Christens,Carrie Wright,Ray DeV. Peters +8 more
TL;DR: This article conducted a qualitative study to understand the educational aspirations and subsequent pathways of young adults with former child welfare involvement and found that none of the young adults achieved the educational and occupational dreams they had in high school.
It Takes Less than a Village to Influence Educational Aspirations and Attainment
Gurmak Singh,Colleen Loomis,Christina Dimakos,Blaise Y. O’Malley,Sylvie L. Lamont,Janette Pelletier,Brian D. Christens,Carrie Wright,Ray DeV. Peters +8 more
TL;DR: In this article , the authors investigated how various influencers shape the development of educational aspirations and may contribute to goal setting and eventual attainment of an early aspiration, and found that individuals with a diverse set of influencers attained their educational goals with an important exception.
Locating longitudinal study participants 10 years after last contact: Contemporary approaches to sample retention.
Christina Dimakos,Colleen Loomis,Alexis Gilmer,Carrie Wright,Brian D. Christens,Janette Pelletier,Ray Peters +6 more
TL;DR: This paper examined the processes and outcomes of attempts to reach 1736 individuals who have been part of a multi-wave study about growing up in Ontario, Canada, and found that 41.5% of the original sample was reached.