Name File Type Size Last Modified
Data Access File_R Code for Step 1_TEA Enrollments.txt text/plain 11 KB 01/14/2026 05:41:PM
Data Access File_R Code for Step 2_Create Cohorts.txt text/plain 24.5 KB 12/23/2025 01:12:PM
Data Access File_R Code for Step 3a_Dual Enrollment.txt text/plain 5.4 KB 12/23/2025 01:17:PM
Data Access File_R Code for Step 3b_Assessment Scores.txt text/plain 5.1 KB 12/23/2025 01:20:PM
Data Access File_R Code for Step 3c_School-Level Characteristics.txt text/plain 13.3 KB 12/23/2025 01:21:PM
Data Access File_R Code for Step 4a_Enrollment YoY.txt text/plain 13.8 KB 12/23/2025 01:49:PM
Data Access File_R Code for Step 4b_Wages YoY.txt text/plain 3.1 KB 12/23/2025 01:50:PM
Data Access File_R Code for Step 5_Create Final Data Set.txt text/plain 10.7 KB 12/23/2025 01:51:PM
Data Access File_Stata Code for Step 6_Propensity Analysis and Regression.txt text/plain 10 KB 12/23/2025 01:52:PM
Data File_2012-2013 ECHS Campus Codes.xlsx application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.spreadsheetml.sheet 20.5 KB 12/23/2025 01:08:PM

Project Citation: 

Dhaliwal, Navi , Griffin, McKenna , Lu, Dillon, Jamilah, Sayeeda, Mahan, David, Miller, Trey , and Kosiewicz, Holly. Data Access Files for: Do Dual Enrollment Students Realize Better Long-Term Earnings? Variations in Financial Outcomes Among Key Student Groups in Texas  . Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2026-01-15. https://doi.org/10.3886/E244211V1

Project Description

Summary:  View help for Summary This study considers whether dual enrollment is associated with students’ earnings outcomes over a longer, ten-year time horizon after high school graduation than previously analyzed in the existing literature. Using longitudinal administrative data that span K-12, higher education, and the workforce, we conduct a propensity score analysis to understand how dual credit participation among five cohorts in the state of Texas—the 2008-2012 high school graduating classes—correlates with annual earnings measured through the tenth year post high school graduation. We find that dual credit participants realize lower earnings than non-participants during the first four years after high school graduation, but achieve higher earnings in years five through ten, netting a cumulative ten-year earnings increase of 6%. We find similar results across many student subpopulations, though smaller magnitudes of association for some, suggesting that dual enrollment relates favorably to distal measures of students’ financial wellbeing.



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