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Relations Among Racial Identity Attitudes, Perceived Stressors, and Coping Styles in African American College Students

✍ Scribed by Helen A. Neville; P. Paul Heppner; Li-Fei Wang


Publisher
American Counseling Association
Year
1997
Tongue
English
Weight
448 KB
Volume
75
Category
Article
ISSN
1556-6678

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✦ Synopsis


This study expanded on previous research with African American college students at predominantly White institutions by examining the theoretically relevant but unexplored relations among racial identity attitudes and (a) both general and culture‐specific stressors and (b) problem‐focused coping styles. Ninety African American college students at a predominantly White university completed the Black Racial Identity Attitudes Scale, Black Student Stress Inventory, Problem Solving Inventory, and Problem‐Focused Style of Coping Scale. A series of multivariate regression analyses revealed that specific racial identity attitudes were statistically significant predictors of both general and culture‐specific stressors. In addition, one racial identity attitude status (immersion/emersion) was a unique predictor of general perceived stressors and problem solving. Results suggest the importance of racial identity schemata as a critical factor in predicting stress and coping responses of African American students at predominantly White institutions. The findings also underscore the utility in distinguishing between general and culture‐specific stressors, which traditionally have been ignored in the psychological literature.