Researchers determined willingness to try new things along with parental attachment could be indicators of self-control among first-year students.
From:
West Virginia University
June 10, 2021 -- Joining a club that
sparks a new interest, playing a new intramural sport or finding a new group of
friends may be just as indicative of a college freshman's loss of self-control
as drinking or drug use, according to new research at West Virginia University.
Self-control -- the ability to exercise
personal restraint, inhibit impulsivity and make purposeful decisions -- in
that first year partly depends on a student's willingness to try new things,
including things adults would call "good."
That's a new finding, according to
Kristin Moilanen, associate professor of child development and family studies.
The study, "Predictors of initial status and change in self-control during
the college transition," observed 569 first year students ages 18-19 at
five points over the course of the academic year. Participants completed the
first wave of the study two weeks before arriving on campus and the other four
over the course of the year.
The tendency to try new things is one of
two indicators -- the other is maternal attachment -- that may gauge which
students would benefit from an intervention, the study found.
"It does suggest that one of the
points of college is to go out and try new things," she said. "There
may be some value in finding out who needs reining in or training in decision
making that they need to slow down and think."
Students who were less interested in
trying new things maintained stable control throughout the year, she said.
A first-year student's self-control
tendencies also depend on the students' attachment to their parents,
particularly their mothers.
"They're responsive," she
continued. "They tend to get along, their relationship is predictable and
they know what their parents are going to do, how they're going to react. They
don't hide their mistakes from their parents."
Conversely, students who were detached
from their parents were more likely to tread more dangerous behavioral waters.
Moilanen said that stems from parents
who were unavailable or inconsistent, making their children tend to push other
people away and dismiss the importance of parental attachment.
"Their self-control erodes more
than those who are more securely attached," she said.
Screening for insecure attachment and
personality dimensions may be valuable for identifying first year college
students who could benefit from discrete targeted early interventions,
particularly those who aren't as attached to their mothers; those students may
benefit from connecting with peers and building a support system, according to
the study.
A third factor, stress, is also likely
to blame for college freshmen's loss of self-control, though this was not
considered in the study.
"It's probably reflecting
fluctuations in stress over the academic year," Moilanen said. "First
year students don't have the most accurate representation for what to expect
and then they get here and they find that it's fun, but they also find it's
stressful."
Stressors, even small ones, Moilanen
said, can be more disruptive to self-control than people realize.
Co-authors of the study included Amy
Gentzler and Nicholas Turiano, both faculty in the WVU Department of
Psychology, and former WVU graduate students Katy DeLong and Shantel Spears.
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2021/06/210610135538.htm
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