Christine Remigio
Welcome! My capstone page is about my research and what I love about sociology.
Christine Remigio
How Student Loans Amplify Existing Inequalities
Abstract
Student loans can be seen as an investment to help college. However, it contributes to the perpetuation of inequality in wealth by race by making less advantaged students vulnerable to a high risk of student loan debt compared to their counterparts. I ask: How does student loan debt among different groups reflect existing social inequalities? I used data from the NLSY 97 cohort to examine race and class in relation to student loan debt (n=668). To analyze the data, I use ANOVA to examine disparities and variances in student loan debt between different racial and class groups. The control variable was class, based on low, middle, and high SES. The independent variable was race. The dependent variable was student loan debt. In the first analysis, I compared blacks to other race. This showed that black students of middle- and high-class had higher means compared to the other groups. In the next analysis, I compared the means of Hispanic students compared to other race. This showed that Hispanic students of middle- and high-class had higher means compared to the other groups. In the final analysis I compared the means of white students to other race. In this analysis the means of white students with a low SES as well as other race and high SES had higher averages of student loan debt.
Major/Minor
Major: Sociology
Minor: Religion
What I Love About Sociology
What I like learning about sociology is intersectionality, social construction and simulation.
Favorite Sociologist
Patricia Collins
Berger and Luckmann
Jean Baudrillard
Acknowledgements
First, I would like to thank my family and friends for their continuous love and support. I would also like to thank the entire sociology department for expanding my knowledge in the field. Thank you to Dr. McCloud and Dr. Luther for helping me throughout the research process.