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College-Educated Women And Marriage: No Longer Risk Being "Old Maids"

 |  Posted: 04/12/2012 4:20 pm Updated: 04/12/2012 8:47 pm

By J. Bryan Lowder
(Click here for original article)

According to a new study by NYU sociologists Paula England and Jonathan Bearak, prepared for the Council on Contemporary Families, college-educated women are now as likely to get married as their less-educated peers -- even if the weddings happen in a somewhat older age range. These findings contradict the previously prevailing idea that women who pursued higher education were more likely to delay finding a mate past some stereotypical “marriageable age” while studying and building demanding careers. The study reports that, “as late as 1950, a quarter of white female college graduates 40 years of age had never married, compared to compared to only 7 percent of their counterparts without a college degree.” The latter category includes education levels ranging from less-than high school to some college.

England and Bearak explain the new paradigm:

[Now] by age 40, the well educated have caught up with the less educated and even surpassed them in the percent that have married. Thus, ultimately the more educated are as likely or even more likely to marry as any other group.

Of course, this news may not matter much to those who don’t hold the institution of marriage in particular esteem as a life-goal, but even so, the findings are encouraging. For one thing, affirming that women can earn Bachelors degrees or higher without sacrificing the potential to get hitched should finally put to rest any lingering notion that a young woman needs to choose between the two early-on. The study also shows that well-educated women (i.e. women who get married later in life) are less likely to get divorced, owing in part to the fact that young marriages demonstrate an increased likelihood of ending.

In terms of race, the delayed marriage boost that college education produces is far more pronounced for black women than for white women. While “black women have lower odds of ever marrying than white women … getting a college education raises ultimate marriage rates by the 30s and 40s much more substantially for blacks than whites.” Black women who don’t complete high school are far less likely to get married than any other group.

If nothing else, this study suggests that family values conservatives like Rick Santorum should stop blathering about the snobbishness of college -- if he wants America to have more traditional families, it’s becoming a prerequisite.

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01:49 PM on 04/13/2012
The last paragraph of this article was well worth the read. Way to get back at Santorum with his own values.
10:28 AM on 04/13/2012
We need to enact policies to "encourage" these non-college educated women to get married, rather than milking the system to support their out-of-wedlock children.
01:24 AM on 04/13/2012
Didn't you hear? College is the new eHarmony.
12:03 AM on 04/13/2012
Oh yeah? Think again... any guy here interested in marrying a non-dischargable six-figure student loan?

The women smart enough not to rack up the debt are going to be in the best position in the years to come! You can do better than 99% of college educations by self-educating on the Internet already.

College - the way people are using it now, as a basic work certification - is obsolete. It won't take too long for employers to figure out that the person with no student debt is cheaper to hire than the person with lots of it.
08:39 AM on 04/13/2012
Not everyone graduates up to their ears in debt. I graduate next month and have zero debt, in fact I have savings. And no, Mommy and Daddy didn't pay for everything, I got scholarships and I work.
03:09 AM on 04/15/2012
That's all well and good, but very few of your peers are similarly situated.
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Lady Cham
Wit...a terrible thing to waste.
09:46 PM on 04/12/2012
It's called a second paycheck...

You need one to live comfortably in the US today. Not so in the 1950's...
09:38 PM on 04/12/2012
Of course the real question here is when are we going to stop referring to unmarried women as "old maids"?
12:21 AM on 04/13/2012
Hear! Hear!
05:30 PM on 04/12/2012
My graduate students did a project on the same topic months ago using the American Community Survey data- same conclusion. http://www.thejuliagroup.com/blog/?p=2261