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Explore the relationship between faith maturity and identity development among college students. Sponsored by the Lilly Endowment, this study conducted web surveys, interviews, and faculty research at Pepperdine University. The research delves into vocational discernment, barriers, and faculty perspectives on vocation. The project investigates how students' identity influences their faith convictions and behaviors, with the aim of promoting spiritual growth.
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The Development of Vocation as CallingResearch Sponsored by the Lilly Endowment Cindy Miller-Perrin Don Thompson Elizabeth Krumrei Emily Andrews Marisa Sessions Faculty Conference Pepperdine University October 8, 2004
Voyage Project Research Overview • Student Vocational Development • Web Surveys • Personal Interviews • Faculty Vocational Discernment & Action • Surveys • Autobiographies
Student Web Survey • Measures faith attitudes, faith behaviors, identity development, vocation definitions, vocational discernment, and vocational barriers. • Longitudinal administered each fall as well as prior to initial enrollment • Entering Freshmen: July 2002, 300 surveyed, 113 completed • Freshmen: March 2003, 300 surveyed, 191 completed • Sophomores: March 2004, 174 surveyed, 111 completed
Student Personal Interview • Students complete 30-minute personal interview in fall of each 4 years at Pepperdine (2002-2005) • 2002 Freshman Sample: 105 students from the 150 who completed the Web survey • 2003 Sophomore Sample: 65 students from the 105 who previously participated • Students to be interviewed fall 2004, 2005
Faculty Survey • Measures faculty members’ concepts of vocation, personal experiences of discerning vocation, and personal barriers experienced while pursuing vocation • Pre/post-test design • Pre-test fall 2003: 144 Seaver tenure track faculty invited, 75 completed • Approximately one-third of these expressed interest in further vocational discernment activity • Post-test will be administered in the fall of 2006
Faculty Autobiographies • Florence, Italy New Faculty Faith, Learning & Vocation Seminar and summer Faith and Learning Seminars participants write self-reflective essays about vocational journeys - highlighting major turning points, crises, experiences of clarity, affirmations, and tensions • Data accumulated from December 2002, Summer 2003, and December 2003, Summer 2004.
Analysis & Dissemination • Faith, Vocation, and Identity – Western Psychological Association, April 2004 – Krumrei, Miller-Perrin, & Thompson • Faculty Conference Presentation, October 2004 • Vocational Discernment and Action Among University Professors – Faith In the Academy Conference, October 2004 – Thompson & Miller-Perrin
Analysis & Dissemination • The Relationship between Status of Identity Development and Maturity of Faith: A Quantitative Study of College Students - International Journal of Psychology of Religion, Spring 2005 - Krumrei, Miller-Perrin, & Thompson • Gender and Vocational Discernment – Conference on Psychology of Religion, April 2005 – Miller-Perrin & Thompson
Analysis & Dissemination • Identity and Faith: The Role of Crisis and Commitment – Conference on Psychology of Religion, April 2005 – Krumrei, Miller-Perrin & Thompson • A Life Dedicated to Service: College Students’ Commitment to Service and the Role of Faith Attitudes, Faith Behaviors, and Personal Sense of Vocation – Western Psychological Association, April 2005 – Andrews, Sessions, & Miller-Perrin
The Relationship between Status of Identity Development and Maturity of Faith Elizabeth Krumrei Bowling Green State University
Questions Commonly Asked by College Students • Who am I? • What should I do? • What is the meaning of life?
Purpose of Study Identity Faith Hypothesis: Students’ level of identity development will be directly related to their faith maturity.
Research Hypothesis Identity Faith: Convictions & Behavior Students with a stronger sense of identity will have deeper faith convictions which will be lived out in concrete behavioral terms.
Past Research • The college years are the “critical years” in development (Parks, 2000). • The college years are an important time of change for the individual self and the religious self (Lee, 2002). • Both healthy and unhealthy forms of development occur during the college years (Love and Talbot, 2002).
Lack of Research • Theories of spiritual development have existed at the margins of student development theory for 20 years but have not been given serious consideration (Love, 2002). • Spirituality and spiritual development have been conspicuously absent from student development theories and ignored by many student affairs professionals (Love & Talbot, 1999).
Importance of Research • Scientific study of faith and identity is necessary for the design, implementation, and evaluation of specific efforts for change and growth among college students. • As an issue of integrity and responsible stewardship, Christians in positions of leadership should be concerned with efforts to promote movement towards greater spiritual and identity maturity (Butman, 1990).
Current Study • The intimate and intricate faith-identity linkage makes intuitive psychological and theological sense, however, there is limited research examining this relationship (Bussema, 1999). • The current study was designed to better understand the relationship between faith and identity among college students.
Domains of Life Politics Religion Philosophy Occupation Morality Sexuality Relationships Purpose Dimensions Exploration Commitment Identity
Identity • The extent of an individual’s exploration of, and commitment to, particular beliefs, roles, and ideologies within the domains of politics, religion, philosophy, occupation, morality, sexuality, relationships, and purpose.
Faith Attitudes Importance of faith Strength of belief Life application of faith Understanding of calling Faith Behaviors Public religious activity Private religious activity Experience of spiritual feelings. Faith
Method • Participants: 189 first-year students. • Measures • two measures of identity • two measures of faith
Measures • Identity • Faith Objective Measure of Ego-Identity Status Self-Perceptions of Identity Strength Survey Faith Attitudes Survey Faith Behavior Survey
Self-Perceptions of Identity Strength Survey • Overall identity scores based on contemplation of, and confidence in: career, religion, morality, politics, sexuality, relationships, and purpose. • Sample items • I am confident in knowing what I should major in at Pepperdine. • My parents have taught me to have a good sense of right and wrong • I have thought a lot about my political beliefs. • I am not completely comfortable with my sexuality. • I have a well-developed understanding of what my gifts and talents are.
Self-Perceived Identity Strength and Faith Identity Strength Faith Attitudes and Behaviors
Comparison Between Identity Status and Faith • For faith attitudes: • Diffusion < Foreclosure, Moratorium, Achievement • For faith behaviors: • Diffusion < Moratorium, Achievement • For faith attitudes and behaviors: • Achievement = Moratorium, Foreclosure
Comparison Between Identity Status Scores and Faith Diffusion Moratorium Faith Attitudes and Behavior
Comparison Between Identity Status Scores and Faith Faith Attitudes and Behavior Commitment to Ideologies
Identity Status Scores and Faith Faith Attitudes & Behaviors Foreclosure & Achievement Scores
Summary of Findings • Self-Perceptions of Identity Strength Survey • High identity is related to high faith • Objective Measure of Ego-Identity Status • Low identity (diffusion status) is related to low faith • Lack of ideological commitments (diffusion and moratorium scores) is related to low faith • High identity (achievement status) is unrelated to faith • Presence of ideological commitments (foreclosure and achievement scores) is unrelated to faith
Necessary-But-Not-Sufficient Theory • Not having a strong sense of identity is an impediment to faith formation. • Having a strong sense of identity does not impact faith in either direction. • Summary: Individuals must be at a mature stage of identity development in order to develop mature faith, but identity development itself is not the cause of higher levels of faith maturity.
Implications • In order to make it possible for students to mature in their faith, students must be encouraged to move beyond the immature stages of identity. • In order to encourage a growth in faith attitudes and behaviors, one must move beyond a focus on identity and find practical ways of fostering spiritual development directly.
Encouraging a Shift away from Immature Identity (Parks, 2000) • Network of belonging • Support and challenge in successes and failures • Atmosphere of inquiry • Genuine dialogue, contemplation, awareness, and critical thought • Images of truth, transformation and interrelatedness • Encouragement to aspire to new possibilities.
Ways Faculty and Staff can Encourage Faith Maturity (Love & Talbot, 1999) • Recognize the importance of faith • Gain understanding of personal spiritual development • Open attitude towards issues of faith among students • Education and training regarding faith development • Recognition for the spiritual underpinnings of emotional crises
A Life Dedicated to Service: Faith and Commitment to Service in College Students Emily Andrews Marisa Sessions
Creating Lives of Purpose • Pepperdine affirms that, “knowledge calls, ultimately, for a life of service” • The college years represent a formative period that determines an individual’s attitudes and behaviors toward service
Characteristics of College Students’ Service Activity • 46% of students participated in some form of community service while in college • 20% of students reported they served 1 to 5 community service hours per week • 28% of students were involved in service activities that lasted more than 12 months • College students most often direct their service toward education, human needs, and environmental groups
Areas of Change Resulting from Service Work • Values • Students’ commitment to social activism and promoting racial understanding are significantly increased • Students who participate in service are more likely to feel they are empowered to bring about changes in society • Behaviors • Time spent in volunteer work during the college years can have a significant effect on time spent volunteering after college • Students’ decisions to pursue careers in service fields are influenced by service experiences in college
Personal Characteristics Associated with Service Involvement • Personality Trait of Agreeableness • Commitment to an Adult Identity • Self-Awareness and Stability in Self-Identity
How a Commitment to Service Develops • Initial commitment • Feeling marginalized as a child • Death of a loved one • Living with a troubled family member • Sustained commitment • Mentor • Relationship with those in need • Faith
Relationship between Gender and Service • Female students more likely to volunteer than males • Males and females differ in volunteer styles and types of programs for which they volunteer
Relationship between Faith and Service • Faith development accounts for much of the variability among young adults’ commitment to service • The faith of young adults committed to service is defined as “organized religion,” as well as, “a personal philosophy that emphasizes service”
Relationship between Vocation and Service • The concept of vocation is an important aspect of faith in the context of service • The Christian perspective defines vocation as “cooperation” in the Lord’s work • Common to all forms of Christian vocation is the charge to love and serve others
Limitations of Past Research • Lacks systematic definition of faith or method of examining faith • Does not expand on students’ attitudes concerning what constitutes a commitment to service work
Present Study • Examined the nature of college students’ commitment to service as part of their life purpose • Students’ conceptions of a “life dedicated to service” • The relationship between faith attitudes and behaviors and commitment to service • The role of gender in service commitment
Method • Measures • Interview – 91 Participants • Service Commitment Dimensions Rubric • Service Commitment Levels • Web Survey – 65 Participants • Faith Attitude Scale • Faith Behavior Scale