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Cindy Miller-Perrin Don Thompson Pepperdine University ACSD National Conference June 5, 2007

The Development of Faith and Life Purpose Among College Students: The Role of an International Living and Learning Experience. Cindy Miller-Perrin Don Thompson Pepperdine University ACSD National Conference June 5, 2007. International Programs at Pepperdine University.

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Cindy Miller-Perrin Don Thompson Pepperdine University ACSD National Conference June 5, 2007

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  1. The Development of Faith and Life Purpose Among College Students: The Role of an International Living and Learning Experience Cindy Miller-Perrin Don Thompson Pepperdine University ACSD National ConferenceJune 5, 2007

  2. International Programs at Pepperdine University • Provide students a life changing international experience designed for intellectual, social, personal and spiritual transformation. • Buenos Aires, Costa Rica, Florence, Heidelberg, Honduras, Hong Kong, Lausanne, London, Madrid, Thailand • 55% of sophomores participate • Student Experiences • Academic – Full Semester/Year Coursework • Living Community – House and Home-stay • Spiritual – Student Led Bible Studies, House Church • Service Projects • Cultural • Extensive Local Travel Opportunities • Group Field trips – Spain, Greece, France, Austria, Brazil, Uruguay • Mentoring – Visiting Faculty, Staff, Peers

  3. Heidelberg

  4. Travel • Students travel each weekend • Program-wide field trip each term

  5. Living & Learning Community: Moore Haus

  6. Home to 55 sophomores & the visiting faculty family Library, computer lab, administrative offices, dorm rooms, and student center

  7. Spiritual Community Weekly Bible Studies and House Church

  8. Mentoring Community The mentor-protégé relationship is based on trust and love.

  9. Question • Did you have an international living/learning experience during your college years?

  10. Research Hypothesis Students who participate in an International Program have more significant growth in faith and sense of life purpose than those who do not.

  11. Method • Student Samples • Seniors assessed in the spring of senior year • Students assessed longitudinally at baseline and every year of college career • Sophomores in all International Programs assessed each semester • Surveys • Questionnaires assessing faith, identity, vocation, and International Program experience

  12. Measures • Faith Attitudes and Behaviors • Faith Maturity • Spiritual Transcendence • Strength of Faith • Vocational Discernment and Action

  13. Faith Attitudes and Behaviors

  14. Faith Maturity Scale • Measures values and behavioral manifestations of faith • Sample items • My life is filled with meaning and purpose • I have a real sense that God is guiding me • My faith shapes how I think and act each and every day • I devote time to reading and studying the Bible

  15. Spiritual Transcendence Scale • Measures ability to step outside of oneself and immediate surroundings to view life on large scale, yielding three subscales: • Connectedness: assesses participants’ sense of community and relationships with others • I am concerned about those who will come after me in life • Prayer Fulfillment: assesses participants’ prayer or meditation experience • I have experienced deep fulfillment and bliss through my prayers or meditations • Universality: assesses participants’ sense of a greater meaning in life • I believe that death is a doorway to another plane of existence

  16. Santa Clara Strength of Faith Scale • Measures general construct of strength of faith • Sample items • My religious faith is extremely important to me • I look to my faith as a source of inspiration • My relationship with God is extremely important to me • I look to my faith as a source of comfort

  17. Vocational Discernment and Action

  18. Question • What was your life purpose when you graduated from college?

  19. Results • Senior Sample: IP vs. No IP Differences • Faith Attitudes and Behaviors • Faith Maturity • Spiritual Transcendence • Strength of Faith • Vocational Discernment and Action • Longitudinal Sample: IP vs. No IP Over Time • Faith Development • Vocational Discernment and Action • Sophomore Sample from International Programs • Travel, Community, and Mentoring Experiences leading to Spiritual Growth

  20. Senior Sample • 283 Seniors • IP Group = 133 seniors who participated in an International Program • No IP Group = 150 seniors who did not participate in an International Program • No significant differences between groups on demographic variables (e.g., age, ethnicity, faith tradition, gender, & socioeconomic status)

  21. Faith Attitudes and Behaviors for Seniors

  22. Faith & Spiritual Transcendence Scores for Seniors

  23. Spiritual Transcendence Subscores for Seniors

  24. Vocation Scores for Seniors

  25. Summary of findings Students who participate in an IP have higher faith scores using a variety of measures Students who participate in an IP are more likely to engage in vocational service Limitation Study design does not allow for conclusions about the direct impact of an IP experience, suggesting the need for a longitudinal approach Conclusions

  26. Longitudinal Sample • Participants (and Response Rates) from initial sample of 300 • Baseline – 113 (38%) • First-Year – 191 (68%) • Sophomore – 111 (64%) • Junior – 132 (83%) • Senior – 114 (70%) • Analyzed subsample matched on age and sex • IP Group = 43 students who attended an international program during their sophomore year • No IP Group = 43 students who did not attend and international program

  27. Strength of Belief Scores for First-Year and Senior Time Periods

  28. Faith Application Scores for First-Year and Senior Time Periods

  29. Faith Behavior Scores for First-Year and Senior Time Periods

  30. Discernment Scores for First-Year and Senior Time Periods

  31. Service Scores for First-Year and Senior Time Periods

  32. Summary of findings International Living and Learning Experiences enhance Belief Strength Faith Application Vocational Discernment Vocational Service Faith Behavior decreases over time for all students, and more so for IP students Conclusions

  33. Question • What was the most spiritually challenging experience you had during your college years?

  34. Sophomore International Programs Sample • 300 Sophomores sampled each term • 80-100% response rate

  35. Factors Contributing to Spiritual Growth in International Programs • Travel • Community • Mentoring

  36. TravelWhat has been the most spiritually challenging part of your International Program experience? • This has been the hardest but also the best year of my life. Living overseas forced me to either embrace or reject what I have believed all my life. It removed my safety nets. • I have grown through having to lean on God in almost every situation: from traveling to school to just living in a different culture, speaking another language. • My month long trip to Africa between semesters challenged my sense of self. • Traveling alone over Christmas Vacation showed me how to depend on the grace of God for support. • A person I met in Greece helped me realize my selfishness, making me want to be more generous.

  37. Ego Identity Status Measures • Classifies subjects into one of four identity groups: • Achievement: exploration and commitment • “It took me a while to figure it out, but now I really know what I want for a career.” • Moratorium: exploration without commitment • “Religion is confusing to me right now. I keep changing my views on what is right and wrong for me.” • Foreclosure: no exploration, but commitment • “My parents decided a long time ago what I should go into for employment and I’m following through with their plans.” • Diffusion: no exploration or commitment • “I haven’t really considered politics. It just doesn’t excite me much.”

  38. Diffusion Identity Scores for IP and No IP Groups

  39. Foreclosure Identity Scores for IP and No IP Groups

  40. Moratorium Identity Scores for IP and No IP Groups

  41. CommunityHow has the community of the international program experience enhanced your spiritual growth? • Our weekly, student led Bible studies & student run worship have had the greatest spiritual impact on me. • Women's small group and student-led worship were an AMAZING support system. The best community I've ever had. This is my home away from home. • The guys’ small group was a time where we could be open and honest. • I have grown more here in my spirituality than I did in Malibu and all of that growth was due to other students. • Simply by living with and engaging with such incredible individuals, who have not only helped me through difficult times, but who have encouraged me to seek God more, I've experienced a growth in spirituality.

  42. MentoringWho has been most instrumental in helping you grow spiritually? Why? • One of the other students in the program made me challenge myself and helped me grow spiritually. • The host family impacted me the most because we are in worship with them and they are the leaders that we look up to in the house. • When I felt weak, my faculty “mom” knew and was someone that would come up to me and ask what was wrong. She would help me understand and trust in God. • She made me feel at home and always made time to check on me and how I was doing. • The program assistant had a great impact on me spiritually this semester through her incredible yet humble display of faith. She is such an inspirational woman of God.

  43. Transferability Shake students loose. Introduce them to an experience, preferably in another culture, that demands that they question life assumptions. Facilitate a sense of community, requiring mutual dependency and trust. Practice mentoring. Train faculty and staff. Provide opportunities for the mentor-protégé connection. Transformation will occur – watch for and nurture it.

  44. Final Conclusions • International living and learning experiences facilitate greater growth in faith and sense of life purpose • Significant opportunities for spiritual growth occur when students leave their cultural comfort zone and rely on communities with mentoring support.

  45. cperrin@pepperdine.eduthompson@pepperdine.edu

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