A longitudinal study investigating the relationships among multicultural receptivity, sense of community, and self‐esteem of Korean adolescents

The relative homogeneity in ethnicity and language of native Koreans and their highly competitive lifestyle, especially among adolescents preparing for college, have limited their solidarity with heterogeneous ethnic groups, which may cause problems in this global era. This study uses the Korean Chi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of community psychology Vol. 50; no. 5; pp. 2385 - 2398
Main Author: Park, Hye‐Sook
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: United States Wiley Subscription Services, Inc 01-07-2022
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Summary:The relative homogeneity in ethnicity and language of native Koreans and their highly competitive lifestyle, especially among adolescents preparing for college, have limited their solidarity with heterogeneous ethnic groups, which may cause problems in this global era. This study uses the Korean Children and Youth Panel Survey to explore the relationships among multicultural receptivity, sense of community, and self‐esteem for Korean adolescents over three time points. For this purpose this study conducted an autoregressive cross‐lagged path analysis, controlling for covariates such as gender, parenting style, peer attachment, and satisfaction with academic achievement. The cross‐lagged effects on each other of self‐esteem and sense of community were positive over time. The cross‐lagged effects on each other of multicultural receptivity and self‐esteem were not statistically significant. The results were less symmetrical for the third pairing: the effects of multicultural receptivity on sense of community were consistently positive, but the effects of sense of community on multicultural receptivity were not statistically significant. To enhance the sense of community, promoting multicultural receptivity and self‐esteem would therefore show good results.
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ISSN:0090-4392
1520-6629
DOI:10.1002/jcop.22782