Twitter Chats as a Research Tool: A Study of Young Adult Financial Decisions
Many researchers collect online survey data because it is cost-effective and less time-consuming than traditional research methods.
Many researchers collect online survey data because it is cost-effective and less time-consuming than traditional research methods.
Online surveys are cost-effective and less time consuming than traditional research methods, such as personal interviews or sending mail to participants.
Using longitudinal data collected from a college cohort in the United States (N = 922), we examined the associations between systemic and structural factors (gender, race/ethnicity, family SES, and first-generation college status), financial parenting (teaching, and modeling behavior), and emergi
Taking ownership of one’s financial behavior can be considered as one of the important milestones of emerging adulthood. This study examined how parental financial socialization and college students’ financial behavior changes over time.
In today’s service society, adolescents come into contact with money and financial products and services earlier and earlier.
Ensuring that young people are financially literate is increasingly important as the current economic climate requires them to engage in complex financial decision making. The current study explored the role of informal learning opportunities in the acquisition of financial literacy among youth.
We examined how subjective and objective financial knowledge were associated with relationship satisfaction through pathways of finance-related rewards (positive financial behaviors, perceived shared financial values with the romantic partner, or lower debt) in a sample of cohabiting or married y