"Quarter" can be singular or plural depending on the situation.
So to make it clear insert what quarter refers to in the sentence.
Examples:
- A quarter (of the apple PIE) IS yours.
- A quarter of the basketball GAME IS over.
- A quarter of my INCOME WAS cut.
often two different subject can talk about the same thing:
- A quarter of the world (POPULATION) IS malnourished. [even though we are talking about people, population is singular.]
- A quart of the world's PEOPLE ARE malnourished. [same meaning but plural]
or
- A quarter of the STUDENTS ARE absent.
- A quarter of the CLASS IS absent. [same meaning]
As for your example, we need to see the whole context to know for sure what the quarter refers to.
- Its research found that a quarter (of the PEOPLE) WERE aged under 18. [this is probably the best]
but these might also be right:
- Its research found that a quarter (of the POPULATION) WAS aged under 18.
- Its research found that a quarter (of the RESEARCH GROUP) WAS aged under 18.
Fractions and decimals get a little tricky.
I think this is right but I don't know grammatical rules very well, so maybe someone can confirm or deny this answer.
Good Question, keep 'em coming