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- Title
COLLECTIVE SELF-ESTEEM: ROLE OF SOCIAL CONTEXT AMONG ASIAN-AMERICAN COLLEGE STUDENTS.
- Authors
Eunha Kim; Donghyuck Lee
- Abstract
The present study explored several layers of individual and contextual variables as related to collective self-esteem among 304 Asian-American college students. The findings suggested that variables, such as immigration generation status and cultural identification, were significantly associated with Private collective self-esteem (personal evaluation of one's ethnic group), while contextual variables, including number of same-ethnicity peers and community ethnic composition, were associated with Public collective self-esteem (judgment of how other people evaluate one's ethnic group). In addition to these variables, age and fluency of heritage language were positively related to Membership esteem (how worthy one feels as a member of one's ethnic group). for the Importance of identity (the importance of ethnic group membership to one's self-concept), cultural identification, number of same-ethnicity peers, and perceived campus climate were statistically significant. The implication of the present findings for future research is discussed.
- Subjects
SELF-esteem -- Social aspects; SOCIAL context; ASIAN American college students; RACIAL &; ethnic attitudes; CULTURAL identity; SOCIAL conditions of ethnic groups; PSYCHOLOGY
- Publication
Psychological Reports, 2011, Vol 109, Issue 3, p1017
- ISSN
0033-2941
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.2466/07.17.21.PR0.109.6.1017-1037