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Critical factors which hindering or facilitating P.R.C. students psycho-socio adjustment to studying and living in CanadaWang, Haiyan January 1990 (has links)
This was an exploratory study which used Flanagan's Critical Incident Technique to find out the factors which hinder or facilitate the psycho-socio adjustment of students from The People's Republic of China to Canada. The 21 subjects for the sample were drawn at random from a name list provided by the Chinese Visiting Scholars and Students Association at University of British Columbia. All of the subjects were graduate students or visiting scholars and had been in Canada for 9-12 months at the time of the interviews.
All subjects were able to identify incidents which hindered or facilitated their first year psycho-socio adjustment to Canada. The total of 385 incidents, 175 facilitating and 210 hindering incidents, were reported. The average number of incidents reported per student was 19.2. Ten major categories which facilitate or hinder PRC students' psycho-socio adjustment to Canada have been found through this research.
Considering the number of incidents reported by the participants, Academic Study & Research was ranked the first place among 10 categories. According to the rate of participation, Language Barriers & Improvement was listed
the highest among 10 categories. Considering the number of facilitating incidents reported by the participants, Initial Settlement was placed the highest. In the number of hindering incidents, category of Language Barriers & Improvement was listed the highest among the 10 categories.
The explanation of the research findings and suggestions for how the findings might contribute to the understanding PRC or other Oriental international students are included in the discussion. / Education, Faculty of / Educational and Counselling Psychology, and Special Education (ECPS), Department of / Graduate
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Perfectionism in university students from Chinese and European cultural backgrounds : an investigation on construct validityVarey, Christine Anne 11 1900 (has links)
Perfectionism has been related to both adaptive functioning such as positive
achievement striving, as well as to negative outcomes such as procrastination and
depression. Numerous studies, using primarily Caucasian subjects, document a
relationship between multidimensional perfectionism and depression. Few studies have
examined perfectionism in samples from different cultural backgrounds. The present
multidimensional conceptualization and operational definition of perfectionism remains
to be tested in terms of meaningfulness and applicability to other cultural groups.
Therefore the overall aim of the current study is to determine if the Multidimensional
Perfectionism Scale (Hewitt & Flett, 1991) shows evidence of construct validity in a
sample of university students from Chinese cultural backgrounds. Evidence of construct
validity is obtained by investigating similarities and differences between the two cultural
groups in the following: the internal structure of the measure; and the relationships
between the measure and other measures (concurrent validity). Differences in mean
levels of perfectionism between Chinese-Canadian and European Canadian students are
also investigated. Data for 191 subjects are reported for the following measures:
Multidimensional Perfectionism Scale (Hewitt & Flett, 1991); Multidimensional
Perfectionism Scale (Frost et al, 1990); Beck Depression Inventory (Beck et al, 1979);
Suinn-Lew Asian Self-Identity Acculturation Scale (Suinn et al, 1987); a Background
Information Sheet. Evidence of construct validity and of the previously documented
relationship between socially-prescribed perfectionism and depression was found for the
Chinese-Canadian sample. The current study lends support for using the Multidimensional Perfectionism Scale (Hewitt & Flett, 1991) with Chinese-Canadian
university students.
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Perfectionism in university students from Chinese and European cultural backgrounds : an investigation on construct validityVarey, Christine Anne 11 1900 (has links)
Perfectionism has been related to both adaptive functioning such as positive
achievement striving, as well as to negative outcomes such as procrastination and
depression. Numerous studies, using primarily Caucasian subjects, document a
relationship between multidimensional perfectionism and depression. Few studies have
examined perfectionism in samples from different cultural backgrounds. The present
multidimensional conceptualization and operational definition of perfectionism remains
to be tested in terms of meaningfulness and applicability to other cultural groups.
Therefore the overall aim of the current study is to determine if the Multidimensional
Perfectionism Scale (Hewitt & Flett, 1991) shows evidence of construct validity in a
sample of university students from Chinese cultural backgrounds. Evidence of construct
validity is obtained by investigating similarities and differences between the two cultural
groups in the following: the internal structure of the measure; and the relationships
between the measure and other measures (concurrent validity). Differences in mean
levels of perfectionism between Chinese-Canadian and European Canadian students are
also investigated. Data for 191 subjects are reported for the following measures:
Multidimensional Perfectionism Scale (Hewitt & Flett, 1991); Multidimensional
Perfectionism Scale (Frost et al, 1990); Beck Depression Inventory (Beck et al, 1979);
Suinn-Lew Asian Self-Identity Acculturation Scale (Suinn et al, 1987); a Background
Information Sheet. Evidence of construct validity and of the previously documented
relationship between socially-prescribed perfectionism and depression was found for the
Chinese-Canadian sample. The current study lends support for using the Multidimensional Perfectionism Scale (Hewitt & Flett, 1991) with Chinese-Canadian
university students. / Education, Faculty of / Educational and Counselling Psychology, and Special Education (ECPS), Department of / Graduate
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