Personality development in immigrant and non-immigrant adolescents: Disruption or maturation?

Author:

Gillespie Sarah1ORCID,Shiner Rebecca2,Masten Ann S.1,Motti-Stefanidi Frosso3

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Child Development, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA

2. Psychology Department, Colgate University, Hamilton, NY, USA

3. Department of Psychology, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Athens, Greece

Abstract

This study examined gender and immigrant status differences in stability and change in the Big Five traits in a sample of early adolescents in Greece from economically disadvantaged schools with a high immigrant composition (65% first- or second-generation immigrants). Youth in the sample ( N = 1252, 46% female, ages 12–13 at time 1) self-reported Big Five traits annually for 3 years. Mean-level and rank-order stability were examined separately by gender and immigration history. Growth modeling of mean-level scores showed declines in all five personality traits for both genders between ages 12 and 14, followed by increases in conscientiousness for girls and boys, and increases in agreeableness and openness to experience for boys only. In sensitivity analyses, boys showed disruption at all levels of perceived economic stress, but only girls with high levels of perceived economic stress showed disruption. Trajectories were similar for immigrant and non-immigrant youth, suggesting that immigrant youth did not show greater mean-level disruption. However, immigrant youth reported lower means on all traits except emotional stability. Rank-order stability was moderately strong over 3 years and comparable across both genders and immigration histories. Results in this high-risk sample supported the disruption hypothesis and suggest that immigration experiences are associated with personality development.

Funder

University of Minnesota

National Science Foundation

Hellenic Foundation for Research and Innovation

Irving B. Harris Professorship

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Social Psychology

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