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Educational Sociology Commons

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Full-Text Articles in Educational Sociology

Who Chooses My Future?The Role Of Personality And Acculturation In First And Later Generation Immigrant College Students’ Career Decision Making, Gema Gutierrez Alcivar May 2015

Who Chooses My Future?The Role Of Personality And Acculturation In First And Later Generation Immigrant College Students’ Career Decision Making, Gema Gutierrez Alcivar

Honors College Theses

Career choice is often reflected by a student’s choice of major. Personality, vocational interests, and cultural influences are also significant factors in the process of choosing a major. For Latino students, maintaining cultural norms is an important part of career choice, although the influence of cultural norms tends to decrease from first to later generations. The current study examined the influences of acculturation and personality (introversion/extraversion) among 57 Latino/Hispanics students: first-generation immigrant students, those who migrated to the US during childhood/adolescence, and later generation students. We hypothesized that later-generation students are more likely to major in business and social sciences, …


A Cross-Cultural Examination Of The Disjunctive Between Aspirations And Expectations/Perceived Outcomes: Strain And Academic Deviance In The United States And Japan*, Miyuki F. Tedor, Susan F. Sharp, Emiko Kobayashi Jan 2015

A Cross-Cultural Examination Of The Disjunctive Between Aspirations And Expectations/Perceived Outcomes: Strain And Academic Deviance In The United States And Japan*, Miyuki F. Tedor, Susan F. Sharp, Emiko Kobayashi

Criminology, Anthropology, & Sociology Faculty Publications

Using comparable self-reported survey data collected among college students in the United States (n = 502) and Japan (n = 441), this study examines a paradox of higher academic deviance among otherwise more conforming Japanese youth while revisiting the debate concerning the disjuncture between aspirations and expectations/perceived outcomes in Agnew’s general strain theory (GST). Confirming the paradox, our results indicate that Japanese students are significantly more deviant academically than Ameri- can students. However, contrary to the expectation of GST, but in support of past empir- ical studies, the higher academic deviance among the Japanese, as compared to Americans, is explained …