Acculturation index for stress and subjective well-being : study of mainland chinese in Singapore.

Acculturation is always discussed and researched upon as a stressful process. Also, within acculturation psychology there lacks standardized measurement methods available to measure various stages of acculturation. Furthermore the research has been heavily focused on acculturation in the United Stat...

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Main Author: Low, Wan Xin.
Other Authors: Weining Chu Chang
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/38828
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-388282019-12-10T14:12:07Z Acculturation index for stress and subjective well-being : study of mainland chinese in Singapore. Low, Wan Xin. Weining Chu Chang School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Humanities::History::Asia::Singapore::Social aspects Acculturation is always discussed and researched upon as a stressful process. Also, within acculturation psychology there lacks standardized measurement methods available to measure various stages of acculturation. Furthermore the research has been heavily focused on acculturation in the United States. In the present study, the possibility of positive acculturation was explored, and two Acculturation Indices were established to measure respectively acculturative stress (accStress) and acculturation subjective well-being (accSWB). The sample consists of 91 Mainland Chinese undergraduates studying in Singapore. Results revealed that the sample population was faring the same as, if not better than, when in country of origin, in terms of accStress and accSWB. Participants with positive accSWB experienced significantly lower levels of accStress as those with negative accSWB, implying qualitatively different experience that warrants future investigation. In addition, using qualitative research method, the study has also identified that the common stressors faced by sample population in Singapore - socio-cultural adjustment and general living adjustment – were qualitatively different from the common stressors they faced in country of origin, namely academic achievement, interpersonal conflict and conflict from non-academic activities. Bachelor of Arts 2010-05-19T06:00:22Z 2010-05-19T06:00:22Z 2010 2010 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/38828 en Nanyang Technological University 66 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Humanities::History::Asia::Singapore::Social aspects
spellingShingle DRNTU::Humanities::History::Asia::Singapore::Social aspects
Low, Wan Xin.
Acculturation index for stress and subjective well-being : study of mainland chinese in Singapore.
description Acculturation is always discussed and researched upon as a stressful process. Also, within acculturation psychology there lacks standardized measurement methods available to measure various stages of acculturation. Furthermore the research has been heavily focused on acculturation in the United States. In the present study, the possibility of positive acculturation was explored, and two Acculturation Indices were established to measure respectively acculturative stress (accStress) and acculturation subjective well-being (accSWB). The sample consists of 91 Mainland Chinese undergraduates studying in Singapore. Results revealed that the sample population was faring the same as, if not better than, when in country of origin, in terms of accStress and accSWB. Participants with positive accSWB experienced significantly lower levels of accStress as those with negative accSWB, implying qualitatively different experience that warrants future investigation. In addition, using qualitative research method, the study has also identified that the common stressors faced by sample population in Singapore - socio-cultural adjustment and general living adjustment – were qualitatively different from the common stressors they faced in country of origin, namely academic achievement, interpersonal conflict and conflict from non-academic activities.
author2 Weining Chu Chang
author_facet Weining Chu Chang
Low, Wan Xin.
format Final Year Project
author Low, Wan Xin.
author_sort Low, Wan Xin.
title Acculturation index for stress and subjective well-being : study of mainland chinese in Singapore.
title_short Acculturation index for stress and subjective well-being : study of mainland chinese in Singapore.
title_full Acculturation index for stress and subjective well-being : study of mainland chinese in Singapore.
title_fullStr Acculturation index for stress and subjective well-being : study of mainland chinese in Singapore.
title_full_unstemmed Acculturation index for stress and subjective well-being : study of mainland chinese in Singapore.
title_sort acculturation index for stress and subjective well-being : study of mainland chinese in singapore.
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/38828
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