Investigating the relationship between Ethnic Racial Identity and student engagement through mental health and purpose:

Thesis advisor: Belle Liang === Ethnic racial identity (ERI) is a developmental model that recognizes that individuals with an ethnicity (e.g., Jamaican, Puerto Rican) and race (e.g., Black, White) will have attitudes, beliefs, and actions influenced by their ethnic and racial group membership which...

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Main Author: Sepulveda, Jonathan Antonio
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Boston College 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:109231
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spelling ndltd-BOSTON-oai-dlib.bc.edu-bc-ir_1092312021-09-21T05:01:06Z Investigating the relationship between Ethnic Racial Identity and student engagement through mental health and purpose: Sepulveda, Jonathan Antonio Thesis advisor: Belle Liang Text thesis 2021 Boston College English electronic application/pdf Ethnic racial identity (ERI) is a developmental model that recognizes that individuals with an ethnicity (e.g., Jamaican, Puerto Rican) and race (e.g., Black, White) will have attitudes, beliefs, and actions influenced by their ethnic and racial group membership which represents an important aspect of their identity (Umana-Taylor et al., 2014). Research on people of Color (POC) who positively identify with their own ethnic and/or racial group and academic outcomes has been mixed, with studies documenting no associations (Guzman, 2002; Ivory, 2003), negative associations (Sellers, Chavous, & Cooke, 1998), and positive associations (Rivas-Drake, Seaton et al., 2014). Moreover, there remains little research on examining the underlying mechanisms explaining the link between ethnic and/or racial identity and student engagement. Research in related fields suggests several potential mechanisms that may help explain the relationship between ERI and student engagement. For example, Sumner and colleagues (2018) posited that marginalization experiences likely shape youth purpose; POC, given their marginalization experiences, may be more purposeful than non-POC. Additionally, research suggests that positive feelings towards one’s ethnic or racial group are associated with positive mental health outcomes (Rivas-Drake, Syed et al., 2014) which in turn are associated with student engagement. The current study investigates the underlying mechanisms for the relationship between ERI and student engagement. Specifically, the study examined associations between either an assimilation (i.e., attitudes in which individuals define identities in nationalistic rather than ethnonationalist terms) or multiculturalist inclusive (i.e., positive attitude towards one’s ethnic-racial group as well as other ethnic-racial groups) ERI status and student engagement. Path analysis was employed to test the mediating role of purpose and mental health on the relationship between ERI and student engagement. The study also examined whether the relationship between ERI and mental health was different across ethnic-racial groups. The results indicate that ERI status was not directly related to mental health. Nor was ERI status indirectly related to student engagement through mental health. However, ERI status was directly related to purpose and indirectly related to self-regulation through purpose. Further, the association between ERI status and mental health differed across ethnic-racial groups. That is, ERI status, both assimilation and multiculturalist inclusive, was more highly associated with psychological wellbeing for POCs than for non-POCs. For White students, there was a positive association between a multiculturalist inclusive ERI status and depression. Youth purpose may explain additional relationships between ERI status and other outcomes. Implications of these findings for research, assessment, and intervention are discussed. adolescence Ethnic racial identity mental health purpose self-regulation student engagement Copyright is held by the author. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0). Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2021. Submitted to: Boston College. Lynch School of Education. Discipline: Counseling, Developmental and Educational Psychology. http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:109231
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic adolescence
Ethnic racial identity
mental health
purpose
self-regulation
student engagement
spellingShingle adolescence
Ethnic racial identity
mental health
purpose
self-regulation
student engagement
Sepulveda, Jonathan Antonio
Investigating the relationship between Ethnic Racial Identity and student engagement through mental health and purpose:
description Thesis advisor: Belle Liang === Ethnic racial identity (ERI) is a developmental model that recognizes that individuals with an ethnicity (e.g., Jamaican, Puerto Rican) and race (e.g., Black, White) will have attitudes, beliefs, and actions influenced by their ethnic and racial group membership which represents an important aspect of their identity (Umana-Taylor et al., 2014). Research on people of Color (POC) who positively identify with their own ethnic and/or racial group and academic outcomes has been mixed, with studies documenting no associations (Guzman, 2002; Ivory, 2003), negative associations (Sellers, Chavous, & Cooke, 1998), and positive associations (Rivas-Drake, Seaton et al., 2014). Moreover, there remains little research on examining the underlying mechanisms explaining the link between ethnic and/or racial identity and student engagement. Research in related fields suggests several potential mechanisms that may help explain the relationship between ERI and student engagement. For example, Sumner and colleagues (2018) posited that marginalization experiences likely shape youth purpose; POC, given their marginalization experiences, may be more purposeful than non-POC. Additionally, research suggests that positive feelings towards one’s ethnic or racial group are associated with positive mental health outcomes (Rivas-Drake, Syed et al., 2014) which in turn are associated with student engagement. The current study investigates the underlying mechanisms for the relationship between ERI and student engagement. Specifically, the study examined associations between either an assimilation (i.e., attitudes in which individuals define identities in nationalistic rather than ethnonationalist terms) or multiculturalist inclusive (i.e., positive attitude towards one’s ethnic-racial group as well as other ethnic-racial groups) ERI status and student engagement. Path analysis was employed to test the mediating role of purpose and mental health on the relationship between ERI and student engagement. The study also examined whether the relationship between ERI and mental health was different across ethnic-racial groups. The results indicate that ERI status was not directly related to mental health. Nor was ERI status indirectly related to student engagement through mental health. However, ERI status was directly related to purpose and indirectly related to self-regulation through purpose. Further, the association between ERI status and mental health differed across ethnic-racial groups. That is, ERI status, both assimilation and multiculturalist inclusive, was more highly associated with psychological wellbeing for POCs than for non-POCs. For White students, there was a positive association between a multiculturalist inclusive ERI status and depression. Youth purpose may explain additional relationships between ERI status and other outcomes. Implications of these findings for research, assessment, and intervention are discussed. === Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2021. === Submitted to: Boston College. Lynch School of Education. === Discipline: Counseling, Developmental and Educational Psychology.
author Sepulveda, Jonathan Antonio
author_facet Sepulveda, Jonathan Antonio
author_sort Sepulveda, Jonathan Antonio
title Investigating the relationship between Ethnic Racial Identity and student engagement through mental health and purpose:
title_short Investigating the relationship between Ethnic Racial Identity and student engagement through mental health and purpose:
title_full Investigating the relationship between Ethnic Racial Identity and student engagement through mental health and purpose:
title_fullStr Investigating the relationship between Ethnic Racial Identity and student engagement through mental health and purpose:
title_full_unstemmed Investigating the relationship between Ethnic Racial Identity and student engagement through mental health and purpose:
title_sort investigating the relationship between ethnic racial identity and student engagement through mental health and purpose:
publisher Boston College
publishDate 2021
url http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:109231
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