2011
DOI: 10.1037/a0021687
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Social cognitive predictors of Mexican American college students' academic and life satisfaction.

Abstract: This study used Lent's (2004) social cognitive model of well-being to examine the academic and life satisfaction of 460 Mexican American college students. A model demonstrated that positive affect, acculturation, college self-efficacy, college outcome expectations, and academic goals predicted academic satisfaction and life satisfaction. Specifically, positive affect had a significant positive relation to all variables measured in the model. Further, acculturation predicted college self-efficacy, college outc… Show more

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Cited by 123 publications
(143 citation statements)
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“…The inclusion of both academic satis faction and academic stress as domain-specific well-being out comes proves useful in understanding the academic experiences of Taiwanese and Singaporean students and predicting their life sat isfaction. The variances in academic satisfaction, academic stress, and life satisfaction accounted for by the modified well-being model with these two Asian samples are higher than those obtained in a Mexican American student sample (Ojeda et al, 2011) and a Portuguese student sample (Lent et al, 2012). Furthermore, the study provides preliminary evidence for measurement equivalence between the English version (online) and the Mandarin version (paper-and-pencil) of the instruments used in this study as well as across the two Asian samples, which may be beneficial to future cross-cultural research that involves English-speaking and Mandarin-speaking participants or uses these two data collection methods.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 75%
“…The inclusion of both academic satis faction and academic stress as domain-specific well-being out comes proves useful in understanding the academic experiences of Taiwanese and Singaporean students and predicting their life sat isfaction. The variances in academic satisfaction, academic stress, and life satisfaction accounted for by the modified well-being model with these two Asian samples are higher than those obtained in a Mexican American student sample (Ojeda et al, 2011) and a Portuguese student sample (Lent et al, 2012). Furthermore, the study provides preliminary evidence for measurement equivalence between the English version (online) and the Mandarin version (paper-and-pencil) of the instruments used in this study as well as across the two Asian samples, which may be beneficial to future cross-cultural research that involves English-speaking and Mandarin-speaking participants or uses these two data collection methods.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 75%
“…Biculturalism is associated with positive outcomes such as lower depression, higher selfesteem, and life satisfaction (Wang et al, 2010), as well as academic outcomes (Ojeda, Flores, & Navarro, 2011). The Mexican American participants, in our study, although attending an HSI, are still required to operate within an institution that has characteristics reflective of dominant European American society, including access to knowledge and resources that might historically have been reserved for those with privilege (Castillo et al, 2004).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…. One variable that has had an effect on student retention is life satisfaction (Frisch et al, 2005;Ojeda, Flores, & Navarro, 2011). Informed by Lent's (2004) social cognitive theory of well-being (SCTW), the present study investigated the effects that independent self-construal, career decision self-efficacy (CDSE), and perceptions of educational barriers have on Mexican American college women's life satisfaction.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%