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Exploring Racial Variations and the Impact of Parental Attachments and Psychological Health among Diverse College Students: Exploring Racial Variations and the Impact of Parental Attachments and Psychological Health among Diverse College Students

Exploring Racial Variations and the Impact of Parental Attachments and Psychological Health among Diverse College Students
Exploring Racial Variations and the Impact of Parental Attachments and Psychological Health among Diverse College Students
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table of contents
  1. Exploring Racial Variations and the Impact of Parental Attachments and Psychological Health among DiverseCollege Students
    1. The College Years
    2. Factors that Affect Psychological Health
    3. Literature Limitations & the Current Study
    4. Sample Participants: Race
    5. Sample Participants: Other Information
    6. Measures
    7. Preliminary Demographic Checks
    8. Results: Predicting Self-Esteem
    9. Results: Predicting Psychological Health
    10. Interaction Terms Predicting Psychological Health
      1. Ethnicity x Family Identity
      2. Ethnicity x Communalism
    11. Discussion
    12. Counseling Implications
    13. References
    14. Authors

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Exploring Racial Variations and the Impact of Parental Attachments and Psychological Health among DiverseCollege Students

Paper based on a study presented at the 2009 American Counseling Association Annual Conference and Exposition, March 19-23, Charlotte, North Carolina

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The College Years

  • The college experience can be stressful due to the many challenges that students face (Allen, 1992; Kalsner & Pistole, 2003). Such challenges include:

    • Striving for academic excellence, establishing friendships, making career decisions and establishing romantic relationships.

  • These stressors can be exasperated for students of color, which makes them more vulnerable to psychological distress (Rice, Cunningham & Young, 1997) .

  • Researchers should delineate factors that promote psychological health among college students, particularly students of color.

Factors that Affect Psychological Health

  • Parental Factors

    • Parental attachments are enduring emotional bonds between infants and their primary caregiver (Bowlby, 1969). Secure attachments are characterized by warm, supportive relationships; whereas, insecure attachments are characterized by emotional detachment and inconsistent/neglectful care.

    • Attachment security provides a psychological resilience that individuals can rely on during times of stress (Bowlby, 1977).

    • Research supports that secure attachment relationships are related to numerous positive psychological outcomes (e.g. Arbona & Power, 2003; Love, 2008).

      Factors that Affect Psychological Health

  • Family factors affecting psychological health include:

    • Family Identity refers to one’s sense of family pride and the level of importance that an individual places on family relationships (Giordano, Cernkovich & DeMaris, 1993).

    • Trust and open communication refers to a sense of dependability and support (Giordano, Cernkovich & DeMaris, 1993).

    • Communalism refers to a sense of interconnectedness among individuals who share social bonds (Boykin & Bailey, 2000).

Literature Limitations & the Current Study

  • Empirical studies have historically neglected to include adequate representations of students of color. Thus, this current study examined the extent to which attachment and family factors predicted psychological health among a racially diverse sample college students.

  • Research Hypotheses:

    • (1) Parental attachments and family factors will predict high self-esteem among racially diverse students?

    • (2) Parental attachments and family factors will predict psychological health among racially diverse students?

Sample Participants: Race

Race/Ethnicity

% of Sample

African American

52.2% (N = 165)

Asian American

1.9% (N = 6)

Caucasian

39.6% (N = 125)

Latino/a

.3% (N =1)

Biracial

2.2% (N = 7)

International

1.3% (N = 4)

Other (e.g. multiracial)

1.9% (N = 6)

Sample Participants: Other Information

Demographic Characteristic

% of Sample

Age: 20.68 years old (SD = 3.94)

Gender

Men

27.5% (N =87)

Women

71.2% (N = 225)

Parental Income

$70,000 (median)

Family Type

Two parent (biological)

57.3% (N = 181)

Single parent

27.8% (N = 88)

Stepfamily

5.7% (N =18)

Two parent (non-bio)

2.5% (N =8)

Other

3.8% (N = 12)

Measures

  • Parental Attachment:

    • Inventory of Parent and Peer Attachment (Armsden & Greenberg, 1987):

      • Trust (α = .81 )

      • Communication (α = .77)

      • Alienation (α = .83)

  • Family Identity:

    • Home Communalism Measure (Boykin & Bailey, 2000):

      • Family Identity (α = .74)

  • Psychological Health:

    • Self Esteem Questionnaire (Dubois et al., 1996):

      • Global Self-Esteem (α = .86)

    • Student Adaptation to College (Baker, & Siryk, 1999):

      • Personal Emotional Adjustment (α = .75)

Preliminary Demographic Checks

  • Significant racial group differences-

    • Parental income (t = -3.38, p < .01)

      • African Americans (M = $72.5K)

      • Caucasians (M = $122.2K)

    • Gender (χ2 = -2.33, p < .05)

      • More women were represented in the Caucasian group (80%), than the African American group (67%).

    • Family Type (χ2 = -5.83, p < .001)

      • A larger percentage of African Americans were from a single-parent household than other participants.

Variable1234567891011
1. Gender---
2. Income-0.04---
3. Family Type0.02-0.14*---
4. Ethnicity-0.14*0.22**-0.14*---
5. Trust0.010.08-0.100.11---
6. Communication-0.080.14*-0.110.090.81**---
7. Alienation0.11-0.15*0.12-0.16**-0.76**-0.67**---
8. Family Identity-0.12*0.03-0.040.050.31**0.37**-0.18**---
9. Communalism-0.16**0.08-0.050.020.17**0.27**-0.14*0.86**---
10. Self-Esteem0.050.14*-0.080.030.31**0.26**-0.32**0.28**0.18**---
11. Psych. Health-0.060.11-0.050.030.070.12*-0.12*0.110.100.23**---

Note. * = p < .05; * * = p < .01

Results: Predicting Self-Esteem

StepPredictorRR2ΔR2BSEBβ
1 Gender
Parental Income
Family Type
.19.04.04 .20
.10
-.06
.13
.01
.05
.11
.13*
-.08
2 Gender
Parental Income
Family Type
Ethnicity
Trust
Communication
Alienation
Family Identity
Communalism
.74.55**.51** .13
.06
-.01
-.09
.53
-.01
-.26
.16
-.04
.09
.00
.03
.04
.10
.09
.08
.15
.17
.07
.09
-.01
-.11*
.49**
-.00
-.25**
.12
-.02
3 Gender
Parental Income
Family Type
Ethnicity
Trust
Communication
Alienation
Family Identity
Communalism
No significant interactions
.75.56**.01 .12
.07
-.00
-.10
.53
.03
-.24
.12
-.06
---
.09
.00
.03
.04
.11
.09
.09
.17
.19
---
.06
.09
-.14
-.12*
.49**
.03
-.22*
.08
-.04
---

Results: Predicting Psychological Health

StepPredictorRR2ΔR2BSEBβ
1 Gender
Parental Income
Family Type
.12.01.01 .01
.01
.04
.18
.00
.07
.00
.12
.04
2 Gender
Parental Income
Family Type
Ethnicity
Trust
Communication
Alienation
Family Identity
Communalism
.36.13**.12** .06
.01
.06
-.05
-.16
.44
-.26
-.18
.01
.18
.00
.07
.08
.19
.18
.15
.28
.34
.02
.07
.07
-.04
-.10
.28*
-.18
-.09
.13
3 Gender
Parental Income
Family Type
Ethnicity
Trust
Communication
Alienation
Family Identity
Communalism
Ethnicity × family identity
Ethnicity × communalism
.40.16*.03 .13
.07
.06
-.03
-.07
.42
-.18
-.52
.67
-.62
.60
.18
.00
.07
.08
.22
.19
.18
.32
.38
.27
.27
.05
.07
.06
-.02
-.05
.27
-.12
-.25
.28t
-.34*
.32*

Interaction Terms Predicting Psychological Health

Ethnicity x Family Identity

A simple line graph showing the relationship between family identity and psychological health. The horizontal axis is labeled Psychological Health, and the vertical axis is labeled Family Identity. Two lines originate from the same point at the lower left and rise upward to the right. A steeper black line labeled African Americans indicates a stronger positive association between psychological health and family identity, while a shallower red line labeled Caucasians indicates a weaker positive association.

Ethnicity x Communalism

A line graph illustrating the relationship between communalism and psychological health. The horizontal axis is labeled Psychological Health, and the vertical axis is labeled Communalism. Two lines start from the same point at the lower left and slope upward to the right. A steeper red line labeled Caucasians shows a stronger positive association between psychological health and communalism, while a shallower black line labeled African Americans shows a weaker positive association.

Discussion

  • Support for cross-cultural applicability of attachment theory was demonstrated.

  • The influence of parental factors on psychological health did not vary by race,

    • High trust = greater self-esteem

    • Open communication = greater psychological health

    • Emotional alienation = low self-esteem.

  • African American students reported higher base levels of self-esteem.

  • The influence of family factors on psychological health varied by race.

  • Variations occurred in the strength of the associations,

    • Family identity is a stronger predictor of psychological health for African Americans.

    • Communalism is a stronger predictor of psychological health for Caucasians.

Counseling Implications

  • Assess clients’ family background as a source of support (i.e. aspects of the attachment relationship, sense of family identity and communalism).

  • Encourage trust and communication between clients and parental figures and family members.

  • Counselors can serve as “supplemental” models for clients by conveying supportive, emotionally warm behaviors and by encouraging autonomy in the therapeutic relationship.

  • Clients can enhance psychological health by establishing secure connections with their counselors.

  • Display cultural sensitivity;

    • Be aware of cultural issues; both, your own and the clients.

    • Understand the client’s cultural values, norms, expectancies, and attitudes.

    • Understand how the influence of parents and family is impacted by the client’s racial/ethnic background.

  • Implement interventions that are culturally appropriate;

    • Culturally appropriate interventions are fundamental, as they are designed based upon the belief that in order to be effective, interventions need to consider the specific personal and shared characteristics of the client (Marin, 2006).

  • Networking and normalizing;

    • Normalize the therapeutic experience.

    • Encourage clients to elicit support from supportive parental figures, friends, clergy, or other significant persons in their lives to promote psychological health.

References

Allen, W. R. (1992). The color of success: African-American college student outcomes at predominantly White and historically Black colleges. Harvard Educational Review, 62, 26-44.

Armsden, G., & Greenberg, M. (1987). The inventory of parent and peer attachment: Individual differences and their relationship to psychological well- being in adolescence. Journal of Youth and Adolescence 16, 427-454.

Arbona, C., & Power, T. (2003). Parental attachment, self-esteem, and antisocial behaviors among African American, European American, and Mexican American adolescents. Journal of Counseling Psychology, 50, 40-51.

Baker, R., & Siryk, B. (1999). Student adaptation to college questionnaire. Los Angeles, CA: Western Psychological Press.

Bowlby, J. (1969). Attachment and loss, Vol 1: Attachment. New York: Basic Books.

Bowlby, J. (1977). The making and breaking of affectional bonds. British Journal of Psychiatry, 130, 201-10.

Boykin, W., & Bailey, T. (2000). Experimental research on the role of cultural factors in school relevant cognitive functioning: Home environment, cultural orientation and individual differences factors. Center for Research on the Education of Students Placed At Risk (CRESPAR) Technical Report #43.

Washington, DC and Baltimore, MD: Howard University and Johns Hopkins University.

Dubois, D., Felner, R., Brand, S., Phillips, R., & Lease, M. (1996). Early adolescent self-esteem: a developmental-ecological framework and assessment strategy. Journal of Research on Adolescence, 6, 543-579.

Giordano, P. C., Cernkovich, S. A., & DeMaris, A. (1993). The family and peer relations of black adolescents. Journal of Marriage and the Family, 55, 277- 287.

Kalsner, L., & Pistole, C. (2003). College adjustment in a multiethnic sample: Attachment, separation-individuation, and ethnic identity. Journal of College Student Development, 44, 92-109.

Love, K. (2008). Parental attachments and psychological distress among African American college students. Journal of College Student Development, 49, 31- 40.

Marin, G. (2006). Defining culturally appropriate community interventions: Hispanics as a case study. Journal of Community Psychology, 21(2), 149-161.

Rice, K., Cunningham, J., & Young, B. (1997). Attachment to parents, social competence and emotional well-being. A comparison of Black & White late adolescents. Journal of Counseling Psychology, 44, 89-101.

Authors

  • Thomas, Deneia M., PhD, is an Assistant Professor in Counseling & Educational Psychology at Eastern Kentucky University, Richmond, Kentucky. Dr. Thomas has research interests in the examination of factors that promote student success among diverse student populations.

  • Love, Keisha M., PhD, is an Assistant Professor in Educational, School & Counseling Psychology at the University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky. Dr. Love has research interests that include attachment relations among ethnically diverse populations, family processes/dynamics, career development (particularly among middle school and high school students), and ethnic minority issues.

  • Tyler, Kenneth M., PhD, is an Assistant Professor in Educational, School & Counseling Psychology at the University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky. Dr. Tyler has broad areas of research interests that include culture, identity development, learning and socialization processes, motivation and school attachment, and minority student achievement. His current work focuses on measuring the degree of alignment between home and school cultures of minority student populations and understanding its link to academic motivation and performance.

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