2019
DOI: 10.1111/jora.12479
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The Varieties of Religious Significance: An Idiographic Approach to Study Religion's Role in Adolescent Development

Abstract: We present a rationale and method for taking an idiographic approach to study the role religion plays in adolescent development. We theorize that adolescents harness qualitatively different aspects of religion to address idiosyncratic developmental needs. Therefore, analyzing religion's role in adolescent development necessitates a case‐by‐case holistic analysis. We introduce a systematic method using narratives to identify the personal ways that individuals attribute meaning in general and regarding religion … Show more

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Cited by 23 publications
(14 citation statements)
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References 68 publications
(112 reference statements)
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“…In the context of health-related behaviour, awareness of religious beliefs and norms related to taking care of one’s own health and responsibility for the health of others can act as a ‘booster’ for using positive religious coping strategies, as so doing could lead to achieving higher well-being. Religiously related fear can motivate young people’s adaptive behaviour by prompting them to appraise the pandemic situation in terms of threat, loss or challenge, and reformulate their previous views on the pandemic through a religious lens (Boss et al, 2015 ; Schachter & Ben Hur, 2019 ). Fearing the negative outcomes posed by COVID may thus trigger cognitive activities that enable adolescents to see or understand the pandemic situation in a different way and to revise their convictions in order to restore internal consistency.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the context of health-related behaviour, awareness of religious beliefs and norms related to taking care of one’s own health and responsibility for the health of others can act as a ‘booster’ for using positive religious coping strategies, as so doing could lead to achieving higher well-being. Religiously related fear can motivate young people’s adaptive behaviour by prompting them to appraise the pandemic situation in terms of threat, loss or challenge, and reformulate their previous views on the pandemic through a religious lens (Boss et al, 2015 ; Schachter & Ben Hur, 2019 ). Fearing the negative outcomes posed by COVID may thus trigger cognitive activities that enable adolescents to see or understand the pandemic situation in a different way and to revise their convictions in order to restore internal consistency.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As in the study of any complex issue, research samples should represent the entirety of the phenomena both in terms of depth as well as breadth of the role of religion and spirituality in positive youth development. Sampling techniques should help elicit experiences that are both idiographic (unique to a particular faith tradition or particular child) and nomothetic (pancultural) (Bloom 2007;Schachter and Hur 2019) and capture experiences throughout the lifespan, particularly from early childhood to emerging adulthood, due to the formative nature of this time. These years provide foundational experiences and include acquiring beliefs, engaging in relevant practices, and exploring identity, with continued development throughout adulthood.…”
Section: Inclusive and Representative Samplesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(Garc ıa Coll et al, 1996;Lerner et al, 2015). This study incorporated youth-centered perspectives and their personal meaning making around menstruation, hijab, and other issues youth described as affecting their development (Schachter, 2019). The study sought multiple data types to highlight youth centered perspectives and experiences as situated within both their macro-contextual and micro-level ecologies.…”
Section: The Current Studymentioning
confidence: 99%