Acculturation of Immigrants in Canada: A Comparison Study - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 27
About This Presentation
Title:

Acculturation of Immigrants in Canada: A Comparison Study

Description:

Acculturation of Immigrants in Canada: A Comparison Study Saba Safdar Paper presented at the Canadian Psychological Association Calgary, Alberta June 9th, 2006 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:153
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 28
Provided by: saba50
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Acculturation of Immigrants in Canada: A Comparison Study


1
Acculturation of Immigrants in Canada A
Comparison Study
  • Saba Safdar
  • Paper presented at the
  • Canadian Psychological Association
  • Calgary, Alberta June 9th, 2006

2
Acknowledgment
  • With special thanks to
  • Elsa Lopes
  • Salima Jadarji
  • Members of Russian and Indian communities in
    Toronto, Mississauga, and Brampton
  • Funding from College of Social Applied Research
    Human Sciences at University of Guelph

3
Purpose of the Present Study
  • The purpose of the present study was to examine
    acculturation of immigrants using the
    Multidimensional Individual Difference
    Acculturation (MIDA) model.

4
Multidimensional Individual Difference
Acculturation Model
Psycho-Social Resilience Psychological
Well-being, Out-group Support, Cultural Competence
Out-group Contact
Acculturation Attitudes
Co-National Connectedness In-group support,
Family allocentrism, Ethnic Identity
In-group Contact
Psycho-Physical Distress Psychological physical
distress
Acculturation Specific Hassles In-group,
Out-group, Family
5
Multidimensional Acculturation Model Safdar,
Lay, Struthers (2003)
B
P
_

_
_




_
_

_

6
Hypotheses
  • Hypothesis 1
  • 1 a) Immigrants with high psycho-social
    resilience are less likely to report
    psycho-physical distress and more likely to
    maintain contact with the larger society
    (out-group contact).
  • 1b) Immigrants with high psycho-social resilience
    are more likely to endorse assimilation and
    integration attitudes.

7
Hypotheses
  • Hypothesis 2
  • Immigrants with high co-national connectedness
    are more likely to maintain contact with their
    ethnic community (in-group contact) and more
    likely to endorse a separation attitude toward
    the larger society.
  • Hypothesis 3
  • Immigrants who experience high levels of
    acculturation specific hassles are more likely to
    experience a high level of psycho-physical
    distress.

8
Hypotheses
  • Hypothesis 4
  • 4 a) Immigrants who endorse separation attitude
    are more likely to maintain contact with their
    ethnic community (in-group contact).
  • 4 b) Immigrants who endorse assimilation attitude
    are more likely to maintain contact with the
    larger society (out-group contact).
  • 4 c) Immigrants who endorse integration attitude
    are more likely to maintain contact with both
    their ethnic community and the larger society.
  • 4 d) No relation between acculturation attitudes
    and psycho-social distress was predicted.

9
Indians in Canada
  • 57 Male, 57 Female
  • Age M38
  • 76 married 65 had children
  • Years in Canada M9
  • 95 immigrant 4 refugee
  • 81 Post-secondary (including 20 graduate
    training)
  • 76 Employed 5 unemployed

10
Cronbach's alpha of the Scales Indian (N 114) Russian (N 168)
Psycho-social Resilience -Psychological well-being (Ryff Singer, 1989) -Cultural Competence (Lay et al., 1998) -Perceived social Support (Zimet, Dahlem, Zimet, Farley, 1988) .78 (18-item) .87 (13-item) .94 (3-item) .70 (18-item) .85 (9-item) .87 (3-item)
Co-national Connectedness -Ethnic Identity Scale (Cameron, Sato, Lay, Lalonde, 1997) -Family Allocentrism Scale (Lay et al., 1998) -Perceived social Support (Zimet, et al., 1988) .84 (15-item) .79 (21-item) .74 (5-item) .83 (12-item) .83 (21-item) .81 (6-item)
Hassles Inventory (Lay Nguyen, 1998) .91 (18-item) .76 (18-item)
11
Cronbach's alpha of the Scales Indian (N 114) Russian (N 168)
Acculturation Attitude (Kim, 1984, revised) -Assimilation -Separation -Integration .71 (4-item) .75 (5-item) .74 (4-item) .70 (8-item) .66 (7-item) .71 (6-item)
Acculturation Behaviour Scale (Safdar et al., 2003) -In-group contact -Out-group contact .84 (6-item) .82 (6-item) .68 (6-item) .69 (7-item)
Psycho-physical Distress -Beck Depression Inventory (Beck et al., 1961) -Zung Depression Scale (Zung et al., 1960) -Health Symptoms Scales (Safdar et al., 2003) - .83 (19-item) .94 (18-item) .87 (14-item) - .79 (18-item)
Obtained Status (Safdar et al., 2003) .75 (4-item) .84 (3-item)
12
MIDA Model (Indian-Canadian)
Psycho-Social Resilience
Out-group Contact
Assimilation
In-group Contact
Co-national Connectedness
Separation
Status
Integration
Psycho-Physical Distress
Acculturation Hassles
X2 (24, N 114) 35.36, p gt .05 X2/df 1.47,
GFI .95, RMSEA .07
13
MIDA Model (Indian-Canadian)
.59
Psycho-Social Resilience
Out-group Contact
.46
.20
Assimilation
-.60
In-group Contact
Co-national Connectedness
Separation
Status
Integration
Psycho-Physical Distress
-.29
Acculturation Hassles
X2 (24, N 114) 35.36, p gt .05 X2/df 1.47,
GFI .95, RMSEA .07
14
MIDA Model (Indian-Canadian)
Psycho-Social Resilience
Out-group Contact
Assimilation
-.35
.36
In-group Contact
Co-national Connectedness
Separation
.17
Status
.46
Integration
Psycho-Physical Distress
Acculturation Hassles
X2 (24, N 114) 35.36, p gt .05 X2/df 1.47,
GFI .95, RMSEA .07
15
MIDA Model (Indian-Canadian)
Psycho-Social Resilience
Out-group Contact
Assimilation
In-group Contact
Co-national Connectedness
Separation
Status
Integration
Psycho-Physical Distress
Acculturation Hassles
.30
X2 (24, N 114) 35.36, p gt .05 X2/df 1.47,
GFI .95, RMSEA .07
16
MIDA Model (Indian-Canadian)
Psycho-Social Resilience
Out-group Contact
.29
Assimilation
.24
.15
In-group Contact
Co-national Connectedness
Separation
.23
Status
Integration
Psycho-Physical Distress
Acculturation Hassles
X2 (24, N 114) 35.36, p gt .05 X2/df 1.47,
GFI .95, RMSEA .07
17
Russians in Canada
  • 62 Male, 106 Female
  • Age M41
  • 80 married 76 had children
  • Years in Canada M 5
  • 94 immigrant 6 refugee
  • 89 Post-secondary (including 15 graduate
    training)
  • 52 Employed 20 unemployed

18
MIDA Model (Russian-Canadian)
Psycho-Social Resilience
Out-group Contact
Assimilation
In-group Contact
Co-national Connectedness
Separation
Status
Integration
Psycho-Physical Distress
Acculturation Hassles
X2 (22, N 168) 30.48, p gt .05 X2/df 1.38,
GFI.97, RMSEA .05
19
MIDA Model (Russian-Canadian)
.35
Psycho-Social Resilience
Out-group Contact
.21
.16
Assimilation
-.42
In-group Contact
Co-national Connectedness
Separation
Status
Integration
Psycho-Physical Distress
Acculturation Hassles
-.22
X2 (22, N 168) 30.48, p gt .05 X2/df 1.38,
GFI.97, RMSEA .05
20
MIDA Model (Russian-Canadian)
Psycho-Social Resilience
Out-group Contact
Assimilation
-.42
.26
In-group Contact
Co-national Connectedness
.16
Separation
-.20
Status
.31
Integration
Psycho-Physical Distress
Acculturation Hassles
X2 (22, N 168) 30.48, p gt .05 X2/df 1.38,
GFI.97, RMSEA .05
21
MIDA Model (Russian-Canadian)
Psycho-Social Resilience
Out-group Contact
Assimilation
In-group Contact
Co-national Connectedness
Separation
Status
Integration
Psycho-Physical Distress
Acculturation Hassles
.27
X2 (22, N 168) 30.48, p gt .05 X2/df 1.38,
GFI.97, RMSEA .05
22
MIDA Model (Russian-Canadian)
Psycho-Social Resilience
Out-group Contact
.19
Assimilation
-.17
In-group Contact
.38
Co-national Connectedness
Separation
Status
.18
.18
Integration
Psycho-Physical Distress
Acculturation Hassles
X2 (22, N 168) 30.48, p gt .05 X2/df 1.38,
GFI.97, RMSEA .05
23
MIDA Model (Russian-Canadian)
Psycho-Social Resilience
Out-group Contact
Assimilation
.24
In-group Contact
Co-national Connectedness
Separation
.15
Status
Integration
Psycho-Physical Distress
Acculturation Hassles
X2 (22, N 168) 30.48, p gt .05 X2/df 1.38,
GFI.97, RMSEA .05
24
Conclusion
  • In both studies psycho-social resilience was
    positively related to out-group contact and
    negatively to psycho-physical distress.
  • Psycho-social resilience was positively related
    to assimilation and negatively to separation.
  • No relation between psycho-social resilience and
    integration was found.

25
Conclusion
  • In both studies co-national connectedness was
    positively related to in-group contact.
  • Co-national connectedness was positively related
    to separation.
  • Co-national connectedness was negatively related
    to assimilation and positively to integration.

26
Conclusion
  • Hassles was positively related to psycho-physical
    distress.
  • Assimilation was positively related to out-group
    contact.
  • Separation was positively related to in-group
    contact (and positively to psycho-physical
    distress in the Russian model).
  • Integration was positively related to out-group
    contact in the Indian model and to in-group
    contact in the Russian model.

27
Conclusion
  • In both studies psycho-social resilience was
    positively related to obtained-status.
  • In the Indian model, assimilation was positively
    related to status and in the Russian model
    co-national connectedness was negatively related
    to status.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com