Journal article
Identity. An International Journal of Theory and Research, 2024
APA
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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
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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
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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 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.