Psychosocial Predictors of Psychological Distress in Taiwanese Secondary School Boys and Girls |
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Authors: | Zuway-R. Hong Patricia McCarthy Veach Frances Lawrenz |
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Affiliation: | (1) Tainan Woman's College of Arts and Technology, Taiwan;(2) University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota;(3) 18-1 No. 5 Cheng Hsin Road, San Ming District, Kaohsiung, 807, Taiwan |
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Abstract: | This study was designed to investigate predictors of psychological distress in secondary school boys (n =779) and girls (n = 893) in Taiwan. Participants completed anxiety and depression scales as part of a larger study. Gender, GPA, parenting practices, self-esteem, and personality/satisfaction were significantly correlated with psychological distress. Significant gender differences were found in students' psychological distress, GPA, stereotyped thinking, academic self-expectations, parental expectations, parenting practices, and mother's education level. Stepwise regressions revealed that self-esteem was the only significant predictor for boys; it accounted for 40.9% of the variance in their psychological distress. GPA, family income, self-esteem, and parenting practices were significant predictors for girls; they accounted for 42.6% of the variance in girls' psychological distress. Research recommendations and educational implications are discussed. |
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Keywords: | psychological distress Taiwan secondary school boys and girls mental health |
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