Psychological Coping and Well-Being of Male Latino Undergraduates

No Thumbnail Available

Authors

Gloria, Alberta M.
Castellanos, Jeanett
Scull, Nicholas

Issue Date

2009-07-15

Type

Article
Peer-Reviewed

Language

en_US

Keywords

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Alternative Title

Abstract

This study examined 100 male Latino undergraduates' cultural self-esteem, perceived educational barriers, cultural fit, coping responses (CRs), and subsequent well-being within higher education. The most commonly reported CR for Latino males was to actively find out more about the situation and take a positive planned action. Assessing group mean differences, a class standing by generation interaction revealed that first-generation lower division and first-generation upper division students reported higher perceptions of barriers to staying in school than second-generation lower division and second-generation upper division students, respectively. Similarly, examining differences of coefficients, the strength of the relationship of perceptions of barriers to staying in school and psychological well-being was significantly stronger for the first-generation than second-generation male students Cultural congruity and emotion-focused coping were most predictive of psychological well-being; however, perception of barriers to staying in school was consistently evident in understanding male Latino undergraduates' educational experiences.

Description

Citation

Publisher

Sage

License

Journal

Volume

Issue

V. 31 Issue 317

PubMed ID

ISSN

EISSN