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Collective Self-Esteem and Psychological Well-Being among White, Black, and Asian College Students
711
Citations
22
References
1994
Year
EthnicitySocial PsychologyEducationMental HealthSocial SciencesPsychologySelf-esteemPsychological Well-beingMinority StressSocial IdentityPrivate SubscalesPsychosocial FactorApplied Social PsychologySocial Identity TheorySocial-emotional WellbeingCollective SelfPsychosocial ResearchCollective Self-esteemCultureAsian College StudentsLife SatisfactionSociologySelf-conceptSelf-assessment
A total of 91 Black, 96 White, and 35 Asian college students completed the Collective Self-Esteem Scale (CSES), as well as measures of psychological well-being (personal self-esteem, life satisfaction, depression, and hopelessness). Correlations between the Public and Private subscales of the CSES were near zero for Blacks, moderate for Whites, and strong for Asians. The membership and private subscales of the general CSES were related to psychological well-being, even when the effects of personal self-esteem on well-being were partialed out. However, when the three groups were examined separately, the relation of CSE to well-being with personal self-esteem partialed out was nonsignificant for Whites, small for Blacks, and moderate to strong for Asians. General and race-specific CSE were correlated for all three groups, although the correlations were strongest for Asians. Implications for symbolic interactionist views of the self-concept, for formulations of mental health, and for methodological issues concerning the CSES are discussed.
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