Risk and Protective Factors of College Students’ Psychological Well-Being During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Emotional Stability, Mental Health, and Household Resources

Author:

Moeller Julia1ORCID,von Keyserlingk Luise23ORCID,Spengler Marion4,Gaspard Hanna25ORCID,Lee Hye Rin3ORCID,Yamaguchi-Pedroza Katsumi36ORCID,Yu Renzhe3ORCID,Fischer Christian35ORCID,Arum Richard3

Affiliation:

1. Leipzig University

2. Technical University Dortmund

3. University of California, Irvine

4. Medical School Berlin

5. University of Tübingen

6. Pennsylvania State University

Abstract

Colleges and universities have increasingly worried in recent decades about college students’ well-being, with the COVID-19 pandemic aggravating these concerns. Our study examines changes to undergraduate emotional sentiments and psychological well-being from before to after the onset of the pandemic. In addition, we explore whether certain risk factors (i.e., prior mental health impairments, trait emotional stability) and protective factors (i.e., subjective socioeconomic status, parental education, household resources) predicted students’ emotions and their intraindividual changes due to the pandemic onset. We compared experience sampling method data from 120 students from before and after the pandemic onset, examining intraindividual trajectories. There was only little change in students’ emotions. Prior mental health impairment and trait emotional stability predicted students’ emotions, averaged across time points, but not emotion changes. Few associations with emotions were found for subjective socioeconomic status and parental education, but study-related household resources predicted levels and changes in emotions.

Funder

Andrew W. Mellon Foundation

Jacobs Foundation

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Developmental and Educational Psychology,Education

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