Empowering Nontraditional College Students: A Self-Transformative Intervention for Promoting Positive Identity Development


Journal article


Alan Meca, K. Eichas, Bethany Cruz, Kelsie K. Allison, Clint Dennard, Zachary Stickley
Identity. An International Journal of Theory and Research, 2024

Semantic Scholar DOI
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APA   Click to copy
Meca, A., Eichas, K., Cruz, B., Allison, K. K., Dennard, C., & Stickley, Z. (2024). Empowering Nontraditional College Students: A Self-Transformative Intervention for Promoting Positive Identity Development. Identity. An International Journal of Theory and Research.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Meca, Alan, K. Eichas, Bethany Cruz, Kelsie K. Allison, Clint Dennard, and Zachary Stickley. “Empowering Nontraditional College Students: A Self-Transformative Intervention for Promoting Positive Identity Development.” Identity. An International Journal of Theory and Research (2024).


MLA   Click to copy
Meca, Alan, et al. “Empowering Nontraditional College Students: A Self-Transformative Intervention for Promoting Positive Identity Development.” Identity. An International Journal of Theory and Research, 2024.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{alan2024a,
  title = {Empowering Nontraditional College Students: A Self-Transformative Intervention for Promoting Positive Identity Development},
  year = {2024},
  journal = {Identity. An International Journal of Theory and Research},
  author = {Meca, Alan and Eichas, K. and Cruz, Bethany and Allison, Kelsie K. and Dennard, Clint and Stickley, Zachary}
}

Abstract

ABSTRACT Identity development has been consistently linked to a variety of positive adjustment indicators and plays a critical role during times of uncertainty. Despite this, only a handful of interventions have been developed to promote positive identity development. However, these interventions have not only focused on adolescent and emerging adults, but apart from a handful of social identity interventions, have also not targeted specific domains of identity development. In the current study, we outline the development of a domain-specific identity intervention, the Making Career and Educational Choices workshop (MCEC), and evaluate pre to posttest outcomes in a sample of 58 college students (Mage = 32.33, S.D.age = 10.95; 48% White; 82% female). Students were assigned to either MCEC (n = 32) or a control (n = 26) group by random assignment of selected time slots. Two-wave latent change modeling indicated intervention gains in identity commitment making, identification with commitment, and identity exploration in breadth and in depth. Although preliminary, the relatively large estimates of intervention-related change provide support for the capacity of career-focused identity interventions to support students in choosing and committing to a future life direction. Implications, challenges, and future directions are discussed to guide future research.




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