Self-compassion as a Mechanism to Facilitate the Adjustment of first-year Students to University Environments

Pravani Naidoo, Maroné Oosthuizen
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Abstract

Abstract Despite high enrolment rates at higher education institutions, a perturbing number of first-year university students discontinue their studies. As first-year students constitute a vulnerable group, it is important to investigate ways in which to facilitate their adjustment to university. Extant research within student populations, including first-year students, deems self-compassion to be a robust protective factor in adjustment to university. However, studies rely largely on quantitative research designs, overlooking the voices and everyday experiences of first-year students. Accordingly, this study aimed to qualitatively explore experiences and practices of self-compassion amongst first-year students when faced with the challenges of adjusting to university. To capture in-depth, rich, thick contextual data, 12 South African first-year students participated in semi-structured interviews in their first semester, while follow-up interviews were conducted with 9 participants in the second semester. Themes generated through reflexive thematic analysis highlighted the yin and yang of self-compassion as a valuable conceptual tool to understand and promote first-year students’ experiences and practices of self-compassion. Further, students’ experiences of self-compassion are more nuanced and contradictory than previous research has indicated. Lastly, receiving social support and being self-compassionate constitute reciprocal processes that students engage with in distinct ways, affecting both the depth and breadth of their experiences. Based on this research, self-compassion is vital for strengths-based mental health programmes amongst first-year students. Programmes should promote the practice of the yin and the yang of self-compassion, foster an accepting approach to experiences, and recognise the nuanced, potentially contradictory nature of self-compassion.
自我同情:促进大一新生适应大学环境的机制
尽管高等教育机构的入学率很高,但令人不安的是,大学一年级的学生辍学了。大一新生是一个弱势群体,研究如何帮助他们适应大学生活是很重要的。现有的对包括一年级学生在内的学生群体的研究认为,自我同情是适应大学生活的一个强有力的保护因素。然而,研究在很大程度上依赖于定量研究设计,忽视了一年级学生的声音和日常经历。因此,本研究旨在定性地探讨一年级学生在面对大学适应挑战时的自我同情体验和实践。为了获得深入、丰富、厚重的背景数据,12名南非一年级学生在第一学期参加了半结构化访谈,而在第二学期对9名参与者进行了后续访谈。通过反身性主题分析产生的主题强调了自我同情的阴阳,这是理解和促进一年级学生自我同情经历和实践的宝贵概念工具。此外,学生的自我同情体验比之前的研究表明的更加微妙和矛盾。最后,接受社会支持和自我同情构成了相互作用的过程,学生以不同的方式参与其中,影响他们经历的深度和广度。根据这项研究,自我同情对于一年级学生基于优势的心理健康项目至关重要。项目应该促进自我同情的阴阳实践,培养一种接受经验的方法,并认识到自我同情的微妙、潜在的矛盾本质。
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