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Shyness, Sociability, and Parental Support for the College Transition: Relation to Adolescents’ Adjustment

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A path model was tested in an ethnically diverse sample of 350 college students in which shyness, sociability, and parental support for the college transition were related to loneliness and friendship quality. Furthermore, friendship quality and loneliness were related to depression and anxiety. High levels of shyness, low levels of sociability, and low levels of parental support were related to high levels of loneliness. High levels of parental support for the college transition were related to more positive friendship quality. Multiple regression analyses suggested that loneliness, but not friendship quality, were related to adolescents’ anxiety and depression. In addition, the interaction between shyness and sociability was significantly related to anxiety for African-American adolescents such that adolescents who reported low levels of sociability in combination with high levels of shyness reported the highest levels of anxiety. There was also a significant interaction between sociability and parental support for African-American adolescents such that high levels of sociability in combination with low levels of parental support for the college transition were related to high levels of anxiety. For White adolescents, only loneliness was related to anxiety.

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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We wish to thank the college students for their willingness to participate in the investigation. We are also grateful to Madelyn Anderson and Denise Rode for their assistance in recruiting adolescents for the investigation. Kathleen Meyer, Claire Palowski, and Xu Xu assisted with conducting the investigation and with the data analyses. Amanda Atchley, Amy Bohlander, Lishia Campbell, Anndrea Dixon, Susan Sears, and Rebecca Yawn assisted with the data collection and data entry.

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Correspondence to Nina S. Mounts.

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Nina S. Mounts is an associate professor at Northern Illinois University. She received her PhD in child and family studies from University of Wisconsin-Madison. Her major research interests are on linkages between parent and peer contexts, parental management of adolescents’ peer relationships, and peer influence on adolescents.

David P. Valentiner is an associate professor at Northern Illinois University. He received his PhD in clinical psychology from University of Texas-Austin. His major research interests are cognitive and emotional factors in anxiety disorders, including the development and maintenance of social anxiety.

Katherine Anderson is a graduate student at University of Wisconsin-Madison. She received her MS in developmental psychology from Northern Illinois University. Her major research interests are on career identity development in college students.

Michelle Boswell is a graduate student at Northern Illinois University. She received her MS in clinical psychology from Northern Illinois University. Her major research interests are on parenting effects on bullying and victimization.

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Mounts, N.S., Valentiner, D.P., Anderson, K.L. et al. Shyness, Sociability, and Parental Support for the College Transition: Relation to Adolescents’ Adjustment. J Youth Adolescence 35, 68–77 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10964-005-9002-9

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10964-005-9002-9

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