USING THE SOCIAL-ECOLOGICAL MODEL TO BETTER UNDERSTAND SEXUAL ASSERTIVENESS AMONG UNDERGRADUATE WOMEN AT AN INSTITUTION OF HIGHER EDUCATION IN THE SOUTHEASTERN UNITED STATES

Abstract

This study examined sexual assertiveness among female undergraduate students at an institution of higher education in the southeastern United States from the context of the social-ecological model. An online survey instrument examined sexual assertiveness, sexual communication self-efficacy, campus climate, and sexual scripts. Structural equation modeling was used to examine the relationships between these variables and all variables significantly predicted sexual assertiveness individually, but when examining the relationships collectively, only sexual communication self-efficacy and campus climate remained significant predictors of sexual assertiveness

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