高等教育机构中第一代有色人种大学生的冒名顶替综合症与心理健康

Lingdan Le
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引用次数: 10

摘要

现存关于冒名顶替综合症的文献主要集中在亚裔美国人身上。本文献综述旨在比较两个边缘群体——亚裔美国人和非裔美国人——的冒名顶替综合症。冒名顶替综合症,也被称为冒名顶替现象,指的是一个人怀疑自己的技能、能力、成功和生活中的整体能力(Parkman, 2016)。亚裔美国学生被定型为模范少数族裔,被认为聪明、勤奋、成绩优异、学术水平高,没有任何情感或适应问题。虽然这些刻板印象被认为是积极的,但它们也给亚裔美国学生施加了很大的压力,使他们在学校表现出色,这可能会增加焦虑和痛苦。在非裔美国人中,羞耻倾向的表现有所不同。它与对亲密和自我贬低的恐惧直接相关(Austin, 2009)。研究人员研究了冒名顶替综合症与学生群体心理健康之间的关系,发现它是心理健康的一个预测指标,它与焦虑、抑郁、心理困扰和少数民族学生身份压力呈正相关(Parkman, 2016)。本综述将试图回答上述两种第一代学生群体中的哪一种,亚裔美国人和非裔美国人在心理健康方面遭受更大的损害,以及在这两种学生群体中是否存在任何特定的心理困扰的心理症状模式。
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Unpacking the Imposter Syndrome and Mental Health as a Person of Color First Generation College Student within Institutions of Higher Education
Extant literature on Imposter syndrome primarily focuses on Asian Americans. This current review of literature seeks to make a comparison of Imposter syndrome between two marginalized communities – Asian Americans and African Americans. Imposter syndrome, also referred to as the imposter phenomenon, refers to an individual who doubts their own skills, abilities, successes, and overall capabilities in their life (Parkman, 2016). Asian American students are stereotyped as the model minority and are believed to be intelligent, hardworking, high achieving, and academic and seen to be free from any emotional or adaptive problems. Although these stereotypes are perceived to be positive, they also place a great deal of pressure on Asian American students to excel in school and this can produce increased anxiety and distress. Among African-Americans, shame-proneness manifests differently. It is directly related to a fear of intimacy and self-deprecation (Austin, 2009). Researchers looking at the relationship between Imposter syndrome and mental health among student populations have found it to be a predictor of mental health, it has been found to be positively correlated with anxiety, depression, psychological distress, and minority student status stress (Parkman, 2016). This review will seek to answer which of the two aforesaid stated student populations of first-generation students, Asian American and African American experience a greater detriment in mental health and if there are any specific patterns of mental symptoms of psychological distress that are found among each of these student populations.
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