Gender Differences in Stress and Coping in First-Year College Students

This study investigates the types of stressors experienced by first-year college students and compares the stressors, stress levels, and coping strategies of males and females. Three research questions were addressed: (a) Which types of stressors do first-yearcollege males and females face? (b) Are...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dalia R. Gefen, Marian C. Fish
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing 2012-06-01
Series:Journal of College Orientation, Transition, and Retention
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pubs.lib.umn.edu/index.php/jcotr/article/view/2797
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spelling doaj-b6f4505e20be46a4bbf846ebe645d6c72021-06-10T17:32:23ZengUniversity of Minnesota Libraries PublishingJournal of College Orientation, Transition, and Retention1534-22632690-45352012-06-0119210.24926/jcotr.v19i2.27972471Gender Differences in Stress and Coping in First-Year College StudentsDalia R. GefenMarian C. FishThis study investigates the types of stressors experienced by first-year college students and compares the stressors, stress levels, and coping strategies of males and females. Three research questions were addressed: (a) Which types of stressors do first-yearcollege males and females face? (b) Are there differences in the levels of stress experienced by males and females? (c) Do males and females use different types of coping strategies? Results suggest that first-year college students experience a number of stressors, mainly ones related to academics, finances, and personal relationships. A differential relationship was found such that females experienced higher levels of stress than males. Female students also reported experiencing significantly more stressors related to academic demands and relationships, whereas males reported experiencing more stressors related to finances. Although females used many of the same coping strategies as males, they differed in the amounts of certain strategies used, mainly emotion-focused ones. Implications are provided for personnel working with first-year college men and women.https://pubs.lib.umn.edu/index.php/jcotr/article/view/2797transitionstressordevelopmentpsychologicalsymptomslonelinessdepressionanxietygenderworkshopscopingstretegy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dalia R. Gefen
Marian C. Fish
spellingShingle Dalia R. Gefen
Marian C. Fish
Gender Differences in Stress and Coping in First-Year College Students
Journal of College Orientation, Transition, and Retention
transition
stressor
development
psychological
symptoms
loneliness
depression
anxiety
gender
workshops
coping
stretegy
author_facet Dalia R. Gefen
Marian C. Fish
author_sort Dalia R. Gefen
title Gender Differences in Stress and Coping in First-Year College Students
title_short Gender Differences in Stress and Coping in First-Year College Students
title_full Gender Differences in Stress and Coping in First-Year College Students
title_fullStr Gender Differences in Stress and Coping in First-Year College Students
title_full_unstemmed Gender Differences in Stress and Coping in First-Year College Students
title_sort gender differences in stress and coping in first-year college students
publisher University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing
series Journal of College Orientation, Transition, and Retention
issn 1534-2263
2690-4535
publishDate 2012-06-01
description This study investigates the types of stressors experienced by first-year college students and compares the stressors, stress levels, and coping strategies of males and females. Three research questions were addressed: (a) Which types of stressors do first-yearcollege males and females face? (b) Are there differences in the levels of stress experienced by males and females? (c) Do males and females use different types of coping strategies? Results suggest that first-year college students experience a number of stressors, mainly ones related to academics, finances, and personal relationships. A differential relationship was found such that females experienced higher levels of stress than males. Female students also reported experiencing significantly more stressors related to academic demands and relationships, whereas males reported experiencing more stressors related to finances. Although females used many of the same coping strategies as males, they differed in the amounts of certain strategies used, mainly emotion-focused ones. Implications are provided for personnel working with first-year college men and women.
topic transition
stressor
development
psychological
symptoms
loneliness
depression
anxiety
gender
workshops
coping
stretegy
url https://pubs.lib.umn.edu/index.php/jcotr/article/view/2797
work_keys_str_mv AT daliargefen genderdifferencesinstressandcopinginfirstyearcollegestudents
AT mariancfish genderdifferencesinstressandcopinginfirstyearcollegestudents
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