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Interpersonal Effects of Belonging: A Brief Intervention for University Students

Version 2 2025-08-13, 15:14
Version 1 2023-09-07, 05:05
thesis
posted on 2025-08-13, 15:14 authored by Kate Stewart
<p>Previous experiments demonstrate that college students benefit academically from learning that early challenges in college are common and impermanent, rather than diagnostic of a lack of belonging. The current project expanded this focus by examining interpersonal functioning – namely, relationship goals and responsiveness – as one mechanism underlying the academic benefits of social belonging. A large-scale experiment (N = 604) utilizing a social belonging intervention for first-year college students tested this possibility. The intervention increased two measures of course credits completed (but not GPA) among socially and economically disadvantaged students, and also increased students’ responsiveness to their roommates; it did not affect compassionate or self-image goals with roommates. None of the relationship variables mediated the effects of the intervention on academic outcomes. Exploratory analyses revealed that the intervention shifted compassionate and self-image goals in expected directions among participants who were relatively low in these goals prior to the intervention. Results suggest that the interpersonal effects of social belonging interventions may be moderated by current interpersonal functioning, and relationship goals and responsiveness do not explain the academic benefits of these interventions. Limitations of this study and future directions are discussed.</p>

History

Publisher

ProQuest

Language

English

Handle

http://hdl.handle.net/1961/auislandora:68551

Committee chair

Anthony H. Ahrens

Committee member(s)

David A.F. Haaga; Nathaniel R. Herr; Leslie D. Kirby

Degree discipline

Clinical Psychology

Degree grantor

American University. Department of Psychology

Degree level

  • Doctoral

Degree name

Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology, American University, 2016

Local identifier

auislandora_68551_OBJ.pdf

Media type

application/pdf

Pagination

56 pages

Access statement

Electronic thesis available to American University authorized users only, per author's request.

Call number

Thesis 10442

MMS ID

99186481598304102

Submission ID

10550

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