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Latino College Student Adjustment: Does an Increased Presence Offset Minority‐Status and Acculturative Stresses?<sup>1</sup>
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2000
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EthnicityEducationMental HealthPsychologySocial SciencesRaceMinority‐status StressesStudent RetentionLatino CultureLatino/a StudiesStudent CultureStressInclusive EducationBlack WomenCollege PipelineMinority StressAcculturative StressesEthnic DiscriminationSchool PsychologyStudent SuccessLargest Ethnic GroupApplied Social PsychologyHigher EducationPresence Offset Minority‐statusSecondary EducationSociologyLatino Students
This study examined whether minority‐status stresses and acculturative stresses increase the risk of psychological maladjustment of Latino students at a university where Latinos constitute the largest ethnic group. Participants were 338 Latino (228 Mexican American, 110 Central American) college students who responded to a mailed survey. The results of 2 separate hierarchical regression analyses of psychological distress and well‐being, controlling for demographic (gender, socioeconomic status, and ethnicity). sociocultural (level of acculturation), college role (generic college stresses), and personal (academic self‐confidence) influences provided partial support for our hypothesis and demonstrated the incremental predictive validity of acculturative stresses, but not of minority‐status stresses. Results are discussed in terms of the variety of stresses that Latino college students are likely to experience.
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