“…Studies using variable-centered approaches have identified that non-parenting youths’ expectations about their future schooling are largely established in adolescence and remain stable through adulthood (e.g., Mello, 2009; Trusty, 2000); importantly, these findings are generally consistent across ethnicity/race. Yet, research using a person-centered approach with a sample of non-parenting African American and Hispanic female adolescents identified four distinct patterns of change in educational expectations across late adolescence: a stable trajectory of graduate school completion, two slightly fluctuating trajectories that hovered around some college completion (one U-shaped curve, and one inverted U-shaped curve), and a stable trajectory that reflected completion of trade school (Mello, Anton-Stang, Monaghan, Roberts, & Worrell, 2012). Additional person-centered longitudinal research with Finnish youth (Tynkkynen, Tolvanen, & Salmela-Aro, 2012) documented five patterns of change in educational expectations across the transition to young adulthood (i.e., consistently high, increasing high, decreasing, consistently low, consistently very low), providing further evidence that heterogeneity in trajectories exists in patterns of change in expectations across this developmental period.…”