Poster
Competition Winners / Abstracts - Social Sciences
Social Sciences - 1st Place
Predictors of Stress, Health Concerns, and Well-Being in a
Longitudinal Contemporary, Nontraditional College Sample
By Shannon Cazeau, SUNY College at Old Westbury
The present study examined longitudinal data in a sample
of largely nontraditional college students, to determine predictors
for identifying students at risk for potentially problematic
amounts of stress and negative consequences. Participants
(N=70) voluntarily completed a battery of questionnaires twice:
during the first two weeks (Time 1) and the last two weeks
(Time 2) of the same semester. Dependent measures consisted
of participants’ Time 2 ratings on several items that
assessed their perceived stress, health status, well-being,
and impact of their health problems on class attendance, which
were totaled to yield a dependent-variables total score (DV
total). Time 1 scores on independent measures were correlated
with Time 2 DV total scores. As expected, two measures of
life events stress, along with age, and initial physical and
psychological health were successful in identifying students
who reported greater stress, more health concerns and lower
sense of well-being by the end of the semester. Contrary to
expectation, students who worked more hours a week were less
stressed, with less health concerns and greater well-being
by the end of the semester than those who worked fewer or
no hours. Schools could use these predictors to target students
who would benefit from stress management interventions.
Social Sciences - 2nd Place
A Comparison of Tactics used for Coping with Stress by School-Age
Children and Teenagers vs. Young Adults
By Radjiny Nestor & Trianna Charles, SUNY College at Old
Westbury
The present study compared coping behaviors used by children
and teenagers (N=103), to those used by young adults (N=160).
Coping responses participants reported they “usually”
or “always” used to cope with stress were rank-ordered.
The top 10 coping tactics used by the children and teens were
compared to those used by the young adults, and analyzed by
age group (children and teens vs. young adults) and gender
(females vs. males). It was hypothesized that: (1) due to
greater maturity and experience, the young adults would utilize
more positive, problem-focused, cognitive/spiritual coping
and health-enhancing tactics than the children and teens;
and (2) the females in both age groups would utilize social
support more frequently. Contrary to hypothesis 1, the children
and teens utilized more positive and problem-focused coping
tactics and the young adults reported engaging in more health-threatening
tactics. There was comparable use of cognitive/spiritual tactics
by the female participants in both age groups, while more
men utilized these tactics than did the boys. As expected,
social support was used by more females in both age groups.
Findings suggest that despite being developmentally less mature,
children and teens may be just as adaptive in their coping
behavior as young adults.
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