| Literature DB >> 36153635 |
Sumin Lee1,2, Ryota Kobayashi3, Mami Oda4, Yoshihide Noritake5, Ken'ichiro Nakashima6.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The transition from school to the workforce is important for concrete future planning. During this period, people are more likely to experience psychological health problems, such as anxiety and feelings of hopelessness and helplessness. In particular, job hunting in individuals with low socioeconomic status (SES) leads to various impulsive behaviors and physical and psychological problems due to a scarcity of economic and time resources. There is a lack of research examining career education and intervention approaches that consider the backgrounds of those experiencing adversities and difficulties due to low SES. Considering these situations, we examined whether shift-and-persist coping strategies (S-P) could buffer the career choice anxiety of individuals with low SES and improve career exploration.Entities:
Keywords: Career; Psychological health; Shift-and-persist strategy; Socioeconomic status
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36153635 PMCID: PMC9509580 DOI: 10.1186/s13104-022-06206-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
Fig. 1Overview of the moderated mediation analysis
Descriptive statistics, reliability coefficients, and correlation coefficients between scales
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 Socioeconomic status | 0.79 | 12.48 | 4.07 | – | ||||||
| 2 Shift-and-persist strategy | 0.83 | 0.04a | 0.86 | 0.15 | ** | – | ||||
| 3 Career choice anxiety | 0.95 | 55.18 | 15.90 | 0.04 | − 0.28 | *** | – | |||
| 4 Career exploration | 0.83 | 44.57 | 7.74 | 0.04 | 0.45 | *** | − 0.17 | ** | – |
aThe original total S-P score was 0.00 (more precisely, 0.00038), 0.00038 was multiplied by 100 and shown to two decimal places to avoid misunderstanding
**p < 0.01
***p < 0.001
The results of moderated mediation analysis in career choice anxiety and career exploration
| Paths | |
|---|---|
| Direct effects | |
| SES → career exploration | − 0.02 [− 0.21, 0.17], − 0.01 |
| Career choice anxiety → career exploration | − 0.03 [− 0.08, 0.03], − 0.05 |
| S-P → career exploration | |
| SES → career choice anxiety | 0.32 [− 0.13, 0.75], 0.08 |
| S-P → career choice anxiety | − |
| Interaction effects | |
| SES ×S-P → career exploration | 0.07 [− 0.23, 0.24], 0.01 |
| SES ×S-P → career choice anxiety | 0.22 [− 0.30, 0.79], 0.15 |
| Conditional indirect effect | |
| SES ×lower S-P → career choice anxiety → career exploration | − 0.00 [− 0.05, 0.01], − 0.00 |
| SES ×higher S-P → career choice anxiety → career exploration | -0.01 [− 0.08, 0.01], − 0.01 |
Number of bootstrap samples for percentile bootstrap confidence intervals: 5000. b = unstandardized coefficient, β = standardized beta, CI = confidence interval, SES = socioeconomic status, S-P = shift-and-persist strategy. Significant paths are shown in bold