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2006 Users Conference

Posted January 23rd, 2006 by Lisa Broniszewski in Add Health

Seventh Annual Add Health Users Conference to be held in Bethesda, Maryland, July 17-18, 2006. The Call for Papers will be posted on the Add Health web site beginning March 3. Workshop registration will be available on-line June 2.

Public Use Add Health – Education Data

Posted November 2nd, 2005 by Jen Darragh in Add Health, Data Archive Updates

The Add Health project recently announced the availability of the public use version of the Wave III Add Health Education Data (constructed by the Adolescent Health and Academic Achievement Study (AHAA)) from Sociometrics. Penn State users may download these data (and all three waves of the public use Add Health data) from the Sociometrics Social Science Electronic Data Library (SSEDL). You need to authenticate in to the SSEDL via the University Libraries Electronic Resources A-Z list. All of the Add Health data is located in the Data Archive on Adolescent Pregnancy and Pregnancy Prevention (DAPPP). You will need to agree to adhere to the public use data agreement associated with these files. You will “sign” your agreement by providing your name and contact information.

The PRI Data Archive does have this particular Add Health dataset and other public use Add Health data files on PopNet UNIX. If you would like to use PRI’s holdings (you must already have a PopNet UNIX account) contact the Data Archivist.

New Dataset – AHAA

Posted July 25th, 2005 by Jen Darragh in Add Health, Education

The Adolescent Health and Academic Achievement (AHAA) Study provides an opportunity to examine the effects of education on adolescent behavior, academic achievement, and cognitive and psychosocial development in the 1990s. It expands the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health to include detailed measures of academic progress and high school curriculum. While Add Health is a rich source of data on social contexts and adolescent development, Add Health has limited information on the academic trajectories of youth. Thus, the AHAA study contributes to the Add Health by providing the high school transcripts of Add Health Wave III sample members.

For more information, please see the AHAA Website.

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