Vasquez-Salgado Yolanda, Greenfield Patricia M, Guan Shu-Sha Angie, Gonzalez Lucy, Tarlow Darby A
California State University, Northridge.
University of California, Los Angeles.
J Intercult Commun Interact Res. 2023;2(1):37-74. doi: 10.3726/jicir.2022.1.0004.
This research focuses on - perceived mismatch between collectivistic ideologies and practices of one student and individualistic ideologies and practices of another - among students living in the dormitories during the transition to college. Two survey studies examined the antecedents and correlates of two types of mismatch: (1) reciprocation mismatch: giving or offering a material or service to one's roommate but not receiving anything in return; and (2) not thinking of the other: feeling as though roommates are not considerate of one's feelings or schedule. Study 1: A sample of 110 students in their first year of college showed that being a first-generation college student increased the likelihood of experiencing reciprocation mismatch. Both forms of mismatch predicted experiences of psychological distress, reports of academic problems, and lower grades. Study 2: A sample of 152 (76 dormitory roommate pairs) first-year college students revealed that social-class differences in parental education between dormitory roommates predicted students' experiences with reciprocation mismatch. Students of lower parental education than their roommate reported significantly more mismatch. More mismatch experience was in turn linked to significantly higher levels of academic problems during the transition to college. Implications for research, residential life, and intervention are discussed.
本研究聚焦于大学过渡期间住在宿舍的学生中——一名学生的集体主义观念与行为和另一名学生的个人主义观念与行为之间的感知不匹配。两项调查研究考察了两种不匹配类型的前因及相关因素:(1)回报不匹配:给室友提供物质或服务但未得到任何回报;(2)不考虑对方:感觉室友不体谅自己的感受或日程安排。研究1:110名大学一年级学生的样本表明,作为第一代大学生会增加经历回报不匹配的可能性。两种不匹配形式都预示着心理困扰、学业问题报告以及较低的成绩。研究2:152名(76对宿舍室友)大学一年级学生的样本显示,宿舍室友之间父母教育程度的社会阶层差异预示着学生的回报不匹配经历。父母教育程度低于室友的学生报告的不匹配情况显著更多。更多的不匹配经历反过来又与大学过渡期间显著更高水平的学业问题相关。文中还讨论了对研究、住宿生活及干预的启示。