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Respecting the LDS/Mormon Minority on Campus: College Students’ Attitudes Toward Latter‐Day Saints 下载免费PDF全文
Alyssa N. Rockenbach Nicholas A. Bowman Tiffani Riggers‐Piehl Matthew J. Mayhew Rebecca E. Crandall 《Journal for the scientific study of religion》2017,56(4):798-819
Members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter‐Day Saints remain a minoritized and marginalized population in the United States at large, a pattern mirrored on the majority of college and university campuses across the United States. This study addresses how social identities, institutional contexts, and intergroup dynamics within the postsecondary education environment contribute to cultivating college students’ attitudes toward LDS/Mormons and Mormonism. Using data collected from 13,584 college students attending 52 institutions across the country, the study employs multilevel modeling to examine these relationships. The analyses highlight the importance of productive interreligious contact in a supportive institutional context for shaping out‐group attitudes. Affirming the interplay between social identity and intergroup contact, effects on out‐group attitudes vary to some extent by religion/worldview. Implications for research and practice are discussed. 相似文献
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Matthew J. Mayhew Alyssa N. Rockenbach Nicholas A. Bowman Marc A. Lo Matthew A. Starcke Tiffani Riggers-Piehl Rebecca E. Crandall 《Review of religious research》2017,59(2):207-230
Evangelical students pose a distinctive set of challenges to higher education professionals. These students, though advantaged to some degree because of their Christian identity, commonly report feeling marginalized and silenced on college campuses. In light of these tensions, the purpose of this study was to examine how non-evangelical students come to an appreciative understanding of evangelical Christianity. Specifically, the research focused on the specific campus conditions and experiences that influence non-evangelical students’ appreciative attitudes toward evangelicals. Findings reveal distinct demographic, institution type, and academic major differences in those students’ perspectives toward their evangelical peers. Additionally, the results suggest that appreciative attitudes toward evangelicals are associated with non-evangelical students’ interfaith experiences, albeit to differing degrees based on self-identified worldview. Recognizing that the work of helping non-evangelical students develop an appreciative understanding of evangelicals is as complicated as it is challenging, especially in the collegiate context, the authors conclude with a discussion of implications for research and practice. 相似文献
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Federspiel I. G. Schmitt V. Schuster R. Rockenbach C. Braun A. Loretto M.-C. Michels C. Fischer J. Mussweiler T. Bugnyar T. 《Animal cognition》2023,26(4):1353-1368
Animal Cognition - Comparing oneself to others is a key process in humans that allows individuals to gauge their performances and abilities and thus develop and calibrate their self-image. Little... 相似文献
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