AbstractsPsychology

Identity projects and positive youth development: The importance of efficacy, integrity, and belonging during adolescence

by Patricia L. Bullen




Institution: University of Auckland
Department:
Year: 2010
Keywords: Adolescent Development, Positive Youth Development, Positive Psychology, Personal Projects, Personal Goals, Identity Projects, Well-being Concerns, Psychological Needs, Efficacy, Competence, Belonging, Relatedness, Integrity
Record ID: 1317238
Full text PDF: http://hdl.handle.net/2292/5675https://researchspace.auckland.ac.nz/bitstream/2292/5675/10/whole.pdf.txt


Abstract

Theory and research have indicated that well-being can be enhanced via the fulfilment of three key well-being concerns or needs, namely efficacy, integrity, and belonging. This thesis used a positive youth development framework to explore well-being concern experiences within the context of a young person???s most salient activities and goals, referred to here as identity projects (Harr??, 2007). Guided by an adaptation of the identity project model (Harr??, 2007), using a longitudinal design, this thesis incorporated both quantitative and qualitative methods to explore how identity projects were negotiated during adolescence; what impact well-being concerns had on commitment to projects; and how this related to subjective well-being (SWB). In the quantitative study, 162 ethnically diverse Year 12 high school students participated at time one (T1); and one year later 87 students took part at time two (T2). Participants completed an adaptation of the Personal Project Analysis tool (Little, 1983), and two independent measures of SWB. The main foci of the quantitative study were to explore the predictive value of each well-being concern to project commitment and SWB; and to investigate if commitment mediated the link between well-being concerns and SWB. For the qualitative study, narrative interviews were conducted among 16 adolescents at three time points ??? Years 12 and 13, and after completing high school. The main foci of the interviews were to investigate how well-being concerns were voiced within the context of specific projects; and to gain insight into how projects were negotiated during life transitions. The quantitative results showed efficacy and integrity, but not belonging, were predictors of concurrent commitment at T1 and actual commitment to T1 projects at T2. The mediating role of commitment (between the well-being concerns and SWB) was, however, not supported. Instead, each well-being concern directly predicted different aspects of SWB, and these relationships changed over time. Overall, experiences of efficacy and belonging, within identity projects, enhanced SWB in the short term, while only experiences of integrity enhanced SWB, namely life satisfaction, in the long term. The qualitative results indicated experiences of efficacy and belonging were most prevalent within leisure pursuits, while integrity was most commonly discussed within education and career projects.