Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) W.E. Woods , Krista M. Chronister , Aleksandria Perez Grabow , Kyndl Woodlee , C.C. Ragland Woods , Alex Von Tunzelmann
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) University of Nevada, Las Vegas, University of Oregon, California State University San Marcos, San Marcos, CA, USA, VA Medical Center
ANO 2021
TIPO Book
PERIÓDICO Journal of Black Psychology
ISSN 0095-7984
E-ISSN 1552-4558
EDITORA Annual Reviews (United States)
DOI 10.1177/00957984211002615
CITAÇÕES 2
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-14
MD5 4A988D06657285718FDBB1F683077462

Resumo

Black students attending historically White institutions of higher education experience racism, racial microaggressions, racial stress, and consequent racial battle fatigue (RBF; Franklin et al., 2014). We examined Black counseling and clinical graduate students' (BGS) experiences of psychological, physiological, and behavioral RBF across their roles as students in class, advisees, and supervisees and differences in RBF experiences by gender and race. Participants were 57 counseling and clinical graduate students who identified as Monoracial, Biracial, or Multiracial Black. One-way, repeated measures analysis of variance results showed that BGS experienced the highest levels of RBF in their student-in-class role, and those experiences differed for women and men. Results suggest that the RBF framework has utility for measuring and further understanding how BGS' student role and learning contexts influence their postsecondary experiences and how institutions can develop better supports for this student population.

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