Supporting First-Year Students During the Transition to Higher Education: The Importance of Quality and Source of Received Support for Student Well-Being

The present exploratory study evaluated perceptions of actual support received in relation to stress and well-being among first-year students attending Canadian and U.S. higher education institutions (N = 126). Given that traditional assessments of received support account only for how often support...

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Main Authors: Rebecca Maymon, Nathan C Hall, Jason M Harley
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Queensland University of Technology 2019-12-01
Series:Student Success
Subjects:
Online Access:https://studentsuccessjournal.org/article/view/1407
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spelling doaj-48ca6a3a40f849ad9348070723db452d2020-11-25T03:54:55ZengQueensland University of TechnologyStudent Success2205-07952019-12-01103647510.5204/ssj.v10i3.14071407Supporting First-Year Students During the Transition to Higher Education: The Importance of Quality and Source of Received Support for Student Well-BeingRebecca Maymon0Nathan C Hall1Jason M Harley2McGill UniversityMcGill UniversityMcGill UniversityThe present exploratory study evaluated perceptions of actual support received in relation to stress and well-being among first-year students attending Canadian and U.S. higher education institutions (N = 126). Given that traditional assessments of received support account only for how often support was received, the present research examined unique effects of support quality in addition to frequency with respect to four distinct sources of support (family, friends, faculty/staff, institution). Following from empirical confirmation of received support frequency (RSF) and received support quality (RSQ) as distinguishable constructs, RSQ was found to significantly mediate effects of RSF across varied well-being outcomes (e.g., stress, burnout, quitting intentions) in relation to family, faculty/staff, and institution support. Overall, study findings highlight the importance of evaluating the quality of support received by first-year students during the transition to higher education and show faculty/staff support to be an important contributor to student well-being.https://studentsuccessjournal.org/article/view/1407well-beingfirst year experiencetransitionstudent support
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rebecca Maymon
Nathan C Hall
Jason M Harley
spellingShingle Rebecca Maymon
Nathan C Hall
Jason M Harley
Supporting First-Year Students During the Transition to Higher Education: The Importance of Quality and Source of Received Support for Student Well-Being
Student Success
well-being
first year experience
transition
student support
author_facet Rebecca Maymon
Nathan C Hall
Jason M Harley
author_sort Rebecca Maymon
title Supporting First-Year Students During the Transition to Higher Education: The Importance of Quality and Source of Received Support for Student Well-Being
title_short Supporting First-Year Students During the Transition to Higher Education: The Importance of Quality and Source of Received Support for Student Well-Being
title_full Supporting First-Year Students During the Transition to Higher Education: The Importance of Quality and Source of Received Support for Student Well-Being
title_fullStr Supporting First-Year Students During the Transition to Higher Education: The Importance of Quality and Source of Received Support for Student Well-Being
title_full_unstemmed Supporting First-Year Students During the Transition to Higher Education: The Importance of Quality and Source of Received Support for Student Well-Being
title_sort supporting first-year students during the transition to higher education: the importance of quality and source of received support for student well-being
publisher Queensland University of Technology
series Student Success
issn 2205-0795
publishDate 2019-12-01
description The present exploratory study evaluated perceptions of actual support received in relation to stress and well-being among first-year students attending Canadian and U.S. higher education institutions (N = 126). Given that traditional assessments of received support account only for how often support was received, the present research examined unique effects of support quality in addition to frequency with respect to four distinct sources of support (family, friends, faculty/staff, institution). Following from empirical confirmation of received support frequency (RSF) and received support quality (RSQ) as distinguishable constructs, RSQ was found to significantly mediate effects of RSF across varied well-being outcomes (e.g., stress, burnout, quitting intentions) in relation to family, faculty/staff, and institution support. Overall, study findings highlight the importance of evaluating the quality of support received by first-year students during the transition to higher education and show faculty/staff support to be an important contributor to student well-being.
topic well-being
first year experience
transition
student support
url https://studentsuccessjournal.org/article/view/1407
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