AI Article Synopsis

  • First-generation college students are those whose parents didn't finish a four-year college degree, and this study looked at their drinking habits compared to students whose parents did.
  • Researchers surveyed 1,342 college students and found that first-generation students drank less heavily over their first three semesters, especially in certain situations.
  • The study showed that the way parents and peers influence drinking differs between first-generation and continuing-generation students, with first-generation students being less influenced by peers as time went on.

Article Abstract

Introduction: First-generation college students are those whose parents have not completed a four-year college degree. The current study addressed the lack of research on first-generation college students' alcohol use by comparing the binge drinking trajectories of first-generation and continuing-generation students over their first three semesters. The dynamic influence of peer and parental social norms on students' binge drinking frequencies were also examined.

Methods: 1342 college students (n = 225 first-generation) at one private University completed online surveys. Group differences were examined at Time 1, and latent growth-curve models tested the association between first-generation status and social norms (peer descriptive, peer injunctive, parental injunctive) on binge drinking trajectories.

Results: Overall, binge drinking frequency tended to decline over the first three semesters of college. After controlling for demographics, substance-free dormitory residence, parental alcohol problems and norms, first-generation status was associated with steeper declines in binge drinking frequency. During the first semester, the association between parental injunctive norms and binge drinking frequency was stronger for first-generation students than for continuing-generation students; this influence declined over time for first-generation students. The influence of peer descriptive norms on binge drinking increased for continuing-generation students; while this influence remained stable over time for first-generation students.

Conclusions: First-generation student status appears to be protective against binge drinking. Substance-free dormitory residence, and perceived parental and peer norms likely play a role in first-generation students' tendency to engage in binge drinking less often over the first year of college.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6954862PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.addbeh.2019.106227DOI Listing

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