10 research outputs found

    Establishing a model of Communication Privacy Management theory: Examining the criteria that predict an emerging adult\u27s likelihood to reveal private information to their parents

    No full text
    The primary goal of this study was to establish a model based on Communication Privacy Management (CPM) theory that investigated the process of privacy management between the parent and the emerging adult child (N = 851) to understand which salient variables predict an individual’s likelihood to reveal private information. In order to establish a model predicting the likelihood of revealing private information, the researcher first operationalized, modified, tested, and confirmed the validity of extant measures for the CPM criteria variables argued for in the literature (culture, gender, context, motivation, and risk-benefit ratio) engaging the theory. Through structural equation modeling, three psychosocial outcome variables were also examined to determine how an emerging adult child’s levels of rumination, stress, and well-being are affected as they become more likely to reveal the private information. Results indicated that emerging adult children reporting (a) a communicatively-open family relational culture, (b) low levels of relational quality, and (c) low levels of relational risk are more likely to reveal private information to their parents, while, (d) personal characteristics, (e) perceived reciprocity, (f) characteristics of the confidant, and (g) stigma risks did not display significant relationships with one’s likelihood to reveal private information. In addressing the decision-making process of privacy management, results indicated that individuals who are more likely to reveal are more likely to ruminate about the private matter. The implications of these findings are that the predictors of privacy management center on the communication and relational factors between the emerging adult child and their parents. The model validated within the study should serve as an exemplar model of CPM and be applied to various relational contexts and topics to more clearly identify the predictors of one’s likelihood to reveal as well as gain a richer understanding of the privacy management process. The research report concludes with a discussion of the theoretical and practical implications of these findings for families, practitioners, and privacy management researchers

    Doing Academic Research: A Practical Guide to Research Methods and Analysis

    No full text
    Doing Academic Research is a concise, accessible, and tightly organized overview of the research process in the humanities, social sciences, and business. Conducting effective scholarly research can seem like a frustrating, confusing, and unpleasant experience. Early researchers often have inconsistent knowledge and experience, and can become overwhelmed – reducing their ability to produce high quality work. Rather than a book about research, this is a practical guide to doing research. It guides budding researchers along the process of developing an effective workflow, where to go for help, and how to actually complete the project. The book addresses diversity in abilities, interest, discipline, and ways of knowing by focusing not just on the process of conducting any one method in detail, but also on the ways in which someone might choose a research method and conduct it successfully. Finally, it emphasizes accessibility and approachability through real-world examples, key insights, tips, and tricks from active researchers. This book is a highly useful addition to both content area courses and research methods courses, as well as a practical guide for graduate students and independent scholars interested in publishing their research. [From Amazon.com]https://digitalcommons.odu.edu/communication_books/1017/thumbnail.jp

    Constructing family: A typology of voluntary kin

    Get PDF
    This study explored how participants discursively rendered voluntary kin relationships sensical and legitimate. Interpretive analyses of 110 interviews revealed four main types of voluntary kin: (i) substitute family, (ii) supplemental family, (iii) convenience family, and (iv) extended family. These types were rendered sensical and legitimated by drawing on the discourse of the traditional family. Except for the extended family, three of four voluntary kin family types were justified by an attributed deficit in the blood and legal family. Because voluntary kin relationships are not based on the traditional criteria of association by blood or law, members experience them as potentially challenging, requiring discursive work to render them sensical and legitimate to others
    corecore