West Chester University

Digital Commons @ West Chester University
Not a member yet
    5257 research outputs found

    WCU Digital Commons Submission Guidelines

    No full text

    An Investigation into Distinctions between Nonsuicidal Self-Injury and Disordered Eating Behaviors

    No full text
    The investigation of nonsuicidal self-injury (NSSI) and eating disorders (EDs) is important for the field of clinical psychology to clearly conceptualize and treat self-destructive behaviors. The present study aimed first to understand experiences of NSSI and ED behaviors and then to determine the best way to conceptualize indirect versus direct self-harm behaviors to inform treatment. Four research questions focused on (1) experiences of the behaviors, (2) functions of the behaviors, (3) conceptualization of direct/indirect self-harm, and (4) descriptions of treatment experiences. Interviews were conducted with nine people (eight women, one nonbinary) with a mean age of 31 years old. Participants engaged in an average of five types of NSSI and two types of ED behaviors in their lifetime. Reflexive thematic analyses based on research questions led to the development of main themes and subthemes. Themes described NSSI as more dynamic than EDs with emphasis on change over time and EDs were described with clearer and more pervasive consequences, especially in social functioning. Both NSSI and EDs involved emotions and need for control, but intention to cause harm was not clearly defined for any behavior. Participants described direct harm as physical damage and indirect harm as consequences and had not made the distinction previously. Participants indicated that clinicians have attitudes toward NSSI that impact how treatment is provided and received. Implications for clinical practice include expanded assessment of behaviors, clinician professional development, and treatment emphasis on emotion regulation to address all behaviors

    Intergenerational Resilience: Exploring whether Positive Childhood Experiences Buffer the Transmission of Harsh and Neglectful Parenting

    Full text link
    Childhood abuse and neglect are associated with lasting negative mental and physical health outcomes across the lifespan. In contrast, positive childhood experiences (PCEs) can promote long-term health and wellbeing and mitigate the harmful effects of childhood adversity. A primary risk factor for child maltreatment is parental experiences of maltreatment whereby history of childhood trauma increases the likelihood of utilizing harsh and/or neglectful parenting towards one’s children. This study employed secondary data analysis of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health to test whether cumulative PCEs confer protective effects against the generational transmission of harsh and neglectful parenting. Consistent with prior research, parental history of childhood maltreatment was associated with having experienced fewer PCEs during adolescence and engaging in greater harsh and/or neglectful parenting towards one’s own children in adulthood. More PCEs were associated with less harsh parenting in bivariate correlations, but did not survive controls for childhood maltreatment and demographics in the regression. In a regression predicting overall maltreating parenting behavior, there was a significant main effect of childhood maltreatment on parenting behavior, and significant interaction of PCEs and childhood maltreatment. However, when graphed, the interaction did not suggest a buffering pattern as expected. Altogether, findings suggest that PCEs may reduce risk for harsh parenting in particular, though these benefits were overwhelmed in the presence of childhood maltreatment. PCEs may have benefits for outcomes other than problematic parenting behaviors, and highlights the need for further research to identify individual or structural factors that help break cycles of maltreatment

    WCU Digital Commons Accessibility Statement

    No full text

    WCU Digital Commons Accessibility Implementation Plan

    No full text

    A Free Black Farming Community in White Clay Creek Hundred

    No full text
    Although Delaware remained a slave state until the end of the Civil War, free Blacks were able to acquire land before that.  A small group settled along Delaware’s northern border with Chester County, even though Pennsylvania offered greater legal protection against enslavement.  This article describes what is known about the four families that settled along Hopkins Road in White Clay Creek Hundred, and the factors that affected their decision to remain in Delaware

    A HandUP Approach: Applying an Oppression Lens to Perceptions of Factors Interfering with Black and African American Undergraduate Persistence at a Predominantly White Institution

    Full text link
    Black and African American students face persistent equity gaps in higher education, including lagging behind in bachelor’s degree completion rates. Students impacted by equity gaps are at risk for interpreting such gaps as a reflection of their personal effort rather than structural barriers to college persistence. The current study applied the Racial Encounter Coping Appraisal and Socialization Theory to understand how Black and African American undergraduates appraise what could interfere with their college persistence. Participants (n = 92) completed questionnaires assessing university belongingness, college self-efficacy, and centrality of Black identity, including an open-ended question asking what they perceived might interfere with graduating from college. Thematic analysis was conducted on qualitative responses, and correlations and t-tests on quantitative data. The most frequent codes for perceptions of what could interfere with college persistence were challenges with time management and motivation, financial stressors, and mental health and stress. Financial stress was associated with lower college self-efficacy and first-generation status. Saying “nothing” could interfere was associated with higher college self-efficacy and non-first-generation status. Perceiving “only myself” could interfere was associated with higher centrality of Black identity. Non-first-generation status was associated with perceiving that social pressures could interfere. Some undergraduates may appraise barriers to college persistence that exemplify internalization of self-blame and minimalization of structural inequities, which ultimately serves the status quo. These findings could inform an intervention delivered by campus supports to help Black and African American undergraduates use healthy racial stress reappraisal and coping strategies, which we refer to as the HandUP approach

    Physcomitrium pyriforme (Goblet Moss)

    No full text
    Physcomitrium pyriforme (Goblet Moss) 4/23/20 Group: Bryophytes Type: Mosses Family: Funariaceae Notes Common Names: Goblet Moss; Common Bladder Moss; Pear-shaped Urn Moss Years Noted: 2020; 2021; 2022 Identified and First Noted By: Nur Ritterhttps://digitalcommons.wcupa.edu/gna_bps_bry/1065/thumbnail.jp

    Physcomitrium pyriforme (Goblet Moss)

    No full text
    Physcomitrium pyriforme (Goblet Moss) 4/23/20 Group: Bryophytes Type: Mosses Family: Funariaceae Notes Common Names: Goblet Moss; Common Bladder Moss; Pear-shaped Urn Moss Years Noted: 2020; 2021; 2022 Identified and First Noted By: Nur Ritterhttps://digitalcommons.wcupa.edu/gna_bps_bry/1063/thumbnail.jp

    Physcomitrium pyriforme (Goblet Moss)

    No full text
    Physcomitrium pyriforme (Goblet Moss) 4/23/20 Group: Bryophytes Type: Mosses Family: Funariaceae Notes Common Names: Goblet Moss; Common Bladder Moss; Pear-shaped Urn Moss Years Noted: 2020; 2021; 2022 Identified and First Noted By: Nur Ritterhttps://digitalcommons.wcupa.edu/gna_bps_bry/1066/thumbnail.jp

    2,180

    full texts

    5,257

    metadata records
    Updated in last 30 days.
    Digital Commons @ West Chester University
    Access Repository Dashboard
    Do you manage Open Research Online? Become a CORE Member to access insider analytics, issue reports and manage access to outputs from your repository in the CORE Repository Dashboard! 👇