TY - JOUR
T1 - Mothers' reports of children's family formation behavior
AU - Axinn, William G.
AU - Thornton, Arland
AU - Yang, Li Shou
AU - Young-DeMarco, Linda
AU - Xie, Yu
N1 - Funding Information:
This research was supported by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (Grant U01 HD30928). We thank Cassie Johnstonbaugh for her assistance preparing the tables and references in the article and Scott Yabiku for his helpful comments on a previous draft.
PY - 2002
Y1 - 2002
N2 - In this article we explore methods for using mothers' interviews to gather data on their children's family formation experiences. These methods constitute a cost-efficient means of gathering data for models of family background that include both intergenerational and sibling influences. To judge the utility of these methods, we examine the quality of mothers' reports across a range of their children's family formation behaviors. The dimensions of reporting quality we analyze include completeness, precision, and accuracy of mothers' reports. We use unique data from personal interviews with mother-child pairs to test the accuracy of these mothers' reports. The results demonstrate that, with some behaviors, a flexible data collection approach can gather complete, precise, and accurate information on an entire sibling set by interviewing mothers. Our examination of data quality also suggests important limits on the use of this approach. The quality of mothers' reports depends on the subject matter, with mothers providing lower quality reports of their children's cohabitation behavior compared to their children's marital, childbearing, and divorce behavior.
AB - In this article we explore methods for using mothers' interviews to gather data on their children's family formation experiences. These methods constitute a cost-efficient means of gathering data for models of family background that include both intergenerational and sibling influences. To judge the utility of these methods, we examine the quality of mothers' reports across a range of their children's family formation behaviors. The dimensions of reporting quality we analyze include completeness, precision, and accuracy of mothers' reports. We use unique data from personal interviews with mother-child pairs to test the accuracy of these mothers' reports. The results demonstrate that, with some behaviors, a flexible data collection approach can gather complete, precise, and accurate information on an entire sibling set by interviewing mothers. Our examination of data quality also suggests important limits on the use of this approach. The quality of mothers' reports depends on the subject matter, with mothers providing lower quality reports of their children's cohabitation behavior compared to their children's marital, childbearing, and divorce behavior.
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U2 - 10.1006/ssre.2001.0729
DO - 10.1006/ssre.2001.0729
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0036292349
SN - 0049-089X
VL - 31
SP - 257
EP - 283
JO - Social Science Research
JF - Social Science Research
IS - 2
ER -