Changes in college students' socioeconomic status aspirations during the COVID‐19 pandemic

Author:

Rogers Jennica1ORCID,Shane Jacob2,von Keyserlingk Luise3,Heckhausen Jutta1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychological Science University of California, Irvine Irvine California USA

2. CUNY Brooklyn College Brooklyn New York USA

3. Hector Research Institute of Education Sciences and Psychology University of Tübingen Tubingen Germany

Abstract

AbstractAlthough university students tend to be optimistic about their future socioeconomic status (SES), little is known how their SES aspirations changed during the context of the COVID‐19 pandemic. Using latent growth curve modeling techniques, we examined changes in subjective SES aspirations for students who began college before the pandemic (cohort 1; Fall 2019) and students who began college during the pandemic (cohort 2; Fall 2020). Moreover, we assessed how SES indicators (i.e., subjective family SES; first‐generation status; low‐income status) and a contextual financial indicator (i.e., pandemic‐related financial impacts) predicted changes in SES aspirations for both groups of students. Although SES aspirations were similar at the beginning of college for both groups of students, students who began college before the pandemic experienced a greater rate of downward change between the baseline assessment and the assessment shortly after the pandemic began. In both cohorts, students from higher‐SES families had higher SES aspirations at the beginning of college and steeper rates of downward change. Furthermore, despite having similar SES aspirations at the beginning of college, first‐generation students whose first year was interrupted by the pandemic experienced steeper downward changes in their SES aspirations. However, pandemic‐related financial impacts did not predict this downward change for either cohort. Our findings suggest that uncertainty in the early stages of the pandemic may have led to cautiousness in students' aspirations for their future SES attainment, particularly for first‐generation students.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Social Psychology

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