| dc.description.abstract |
The goal of the four studies that comprised this dissertation was to examine how
spirituality/religiosity (SIR), as both an institutional and personal phenomenon,
developed over time, and how its institutional (i.e., religious activity involvement) and
personal (i.e., sense of connection with the sacred) components were uniquely linked
with psychosocial adjustment. In Study 1, the differential longitudinal correlates of
religious service attendance, as compared to involvement in other clubs, were evaluated
with a sample of adolescents (n=1050) who completed a survey in grades 9, 11 and 12.
Religious attendance and involvement in non-religious clubs were uniquely associated
with positive adjustment in terms of lower substance use and better academic marks,
particularly when involvement was sustained over time. In Study 2, the direction of
effects was tested for the association between religious versus non-religious activities and
both substance use and academic marks. Participants (n= 3993) were surveyed in grades
9 through 12. Higher religious attendance (but not non-religious club involvement) in one
grade predicted lower levels of substance use in the next grade. Higher levels of nonreligious
club involvement (but not religious service attendance) in one grade predicted
higher academic achievement in the next grade, and higher academic achievement in one
grade predicted more frequent non-religious club involvement in the next grade. The
results suggest that different assets may be fostered in religious as compared to nonreligious
activities, and, specifically, religious activity involvement may be important for
the avoidance of substance use. The goal of Study 3 was to assess the unique associations
between the institutional versus personal dimensions of SIR and a wide range of domains
of psychosocial adjustment (namely, intrapersonal well-being, substance use, risk
attitudes, parental relationship quality, academic orientation, and club involvement), and to examine the direction of effects in these associations. Participants (n=756) completed a
survey in grades 11 and 12. Personal and institutional dimensions of SIR were
differentially associated with adjustment, but it may only be in the domain of risk-taking
(Le., risk attitudes, substance use) that SIR may predict positive adjustment over time.
Finally, in Study 4, the goal was to examine how institutional and personal aspects of SIR
developed within individual adolescents. Configurations of mUltiple dimensions of
spirituality/religiosity were identified across 2 time points with an empirical classification
procedure (cluster analysis), and sample- and individual-level development in these
configurations were assessed. A five cluster-solution was optimal at both grades. Clusters
were identified as aspirituallirreligious, disconnected wonderers, high institutional and
personal, primarily personal, and meditators. With the exception of the high institutional
and personal cluster, the cluster structures were stable over time. There also was
significant intraindividual stability in all clusters over time; however, a significant
proportion of individuals classified as high institutional and personal in Grade 11 moved
into the primarily personal cluster in Grade 12. This program of research represented an
important step towards addressing some of the limitations within the body of literature;
namely, the uniqueness of religious activity involvement as a structured club, the
differential link between institutional versus personal SIR and psychosocial adjustment,
the direction of effects in the associations between institutional versus personal SIR and
adjustment, and the way in which different dimensions of SIR may be configured and
develop within individual adolescents over time. |
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