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Title: Associate Professor
Sociology Office: 4140A BSB
Sociology Phone: 312-413-3857
Email:
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Joint Appointments: Institute of Government and Public Affairs
Office: Rice Bldg, Suite 525
Phone: 312-413-0295
Research Interests: Early Childhood Care and Education, Families and
Work, Adolescent Development, Multi-Level and Longitudinal Models
Recent Courses:
- Soc 402: Intermediate Sociological Statistics
- Soc 509: Longitudinal Data Analysis
- Soc 520: Contexts of Social Inequality
- Soc 547: Social Inequality and Mental Health
- Soc 245: Marriage and the Family
CV: Download PDF
Bio:
Rachel A. Gordon is an Associate Professor
of Sociology at the University of Illinois at Chicago and a
faculty member of the Institute of Government and Public
Affairs. Gordon regularly teaches the department’s second graduate statistics
course, and has a forthcoming book from Routledge on Regression Analysis for the Social Sciences. Gordon's research broadly aims to measure
and model the contexts of children and families' lives, often using
longitudinal data sets. Currently, she has four major streams of research.
- Domains of Child
Care Quality is a multi-faceted project in which Gordon, and
co-Investigators Robert Kaestner, Sanders Korenman, and Evertt Smith, are using
rigorous psychometric techniques to evaluate new measures of child care quality
specific to domains of child health and development; they will then examine
social inequality in families’ use of care with specific quality
characteristics and how attending settings of varying quality associates with
child outcomes in specific domains. An Institute of Education
Sciences grant (R305A090065) is funding the first
part of the project which examines several research questions relevant to
domains of quality in early childhood education programs. The project team also has proposals under
review at the National Institutes of Health and the U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services to fund other parts of the project. With Kaestner and Korenman, and funding from
the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s RIDGE program, Gordon is also studying
provider and family take-up, and child outcomes, associated with the Child and
Adult Care Food Program in child care settings.
- Costs of Child Care
Problems (with Margaret Usdansky) is examining effects of child care quality and
child care problems on parents. A
current paper (with Xue Wang and Anna Gluzman) examines how mothers’ reasons
for choosing child care associate with their depression levels. A planned project, under review at NIH, would
examine how perceptions and problems with child care influence parental
well-being (and ultimately indirectly associate with child outcomes).
- Race and Place (with Rolf Loeber
and colleagues) is examining the rise and fall of gang participation, gun
carrying, and drug selling among youth who participated in the Pittsburgh Youth
Study. The project is pairing the
study’s rich longitudinal data, following cohorts of 1st and 7th
graders for nearly two decades, with contextual data about gangs, drugs, and
violence in the youths’ neighborhoods and in-depth interviews of homicide
offenders and matched controls.
- Physical Beauty and
Social Stratification (with Robert Crosnoe) is examining how good looks affect
child well-being. A paper based on the
Add Health data (with Xue Wang) finds that beauty is both a social asset and a
social distraction during adolescence, leading to offsetting associations with
grades. The collaborators are currently
examining how these effects carry into adulthood and planning a longitudinal
study that would examine changes in looks and social and academic outcomes from
early childhood into adolescence.
Gordon is completing her fourth term on the
Editorial Board of the Journal of
Marriage and Family, served three terms as co-chair of the Committee on
Research, Policy and Public Information of the Society for Research on
Adolescence, is currently Review Panel Chair for Applied Research, Program Evaluation and
Public Policy for the 2010 Society for Research on Adolescence Biennial
Meeting, and a Council Member for the Section on Children and Youth of the
American Sociological Association (2009-2012 term).
Gordon holds a B.S. in psychology from Pennsylvania State University, an MPP and PhD in
public policy from the University of Chicago, and received
pre-doctoral training in demography and a post-doctoral experience in
work-family research at the NORC Research Centers.
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