College Student Behavior: A Ten-Year Look
- 1 April 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of American College Health
- Vol. 31 (5) , 209-213
- https://doi.org/10.1080/07448481.1983.9939559
Abstract
Lester and Perez1 have suggested that student behavior can be usefully construed in terms of a traditional-hedonic, implicit value system. They demonstrated that drug use and sexual activity provide simple behavioral anchors for this dimension, and observed an increasingly hedonic orientation among students. Ten years after their initial study, the student population at the same institution was again sampled using an anonymous questionnaire. The 1980 sample included 208 subjects, and these were compared with 688 subjects who responded to the 1970 survey. This comparison was supplemented by an intensive week-long study of 53 students within one campus living unit. Significant increases in pre-college sexual activity were noted for both men and women. Marijuana use in high school also increased for both men and women during this period, while alcohol use increased only among women. Previously observed differences between male and female pre-college sexual activity and marijuana use had largely disappeared by 1980. Significant increases in sexual activity while in college were found for women but not for men. For men, overall marijuana and alcohol use in college did not change during the study period, but there was an increase in the frequent use of these drugs. Increases in all categories of marijuana use were noted among women, along with overall increases in their alcohol use. The significant differences between male and female marijuana use noted in the 1970 study were absent in 1980. The intensive week-long study revealed that alcohol use was part of the daily lives of one-third to two-thirds of the students sampled, although they reported interpersonal conflicts, absences from class, accidents, and injuries among the consequences of their drinking. A significant inverse relationship between sleep and alcohol use was observed among women, but not among men. These data suggest that student behavior has become increasingly hedonic during the past ten years, with women in particular closing the gap which previously differentiated their behavior from that of their male peers. Institutions of higher learning must take these changes into account in the planning of academic programs, residential life, and health services.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- The College Years as a Mini-Life Cycle: Developmental Tasks and Adaptive OptionsJournal of American College Health Association, 1981
- The Psychopharmacology of Alcohol; Currents in Alcoholism: Recent Advances in Research and Treatment, Vol. 7American Journal of Psychiatry, 1981
- Preliminary Results of a Longitudinal Study of Collegiate Alcohol AbuseJournal of American College Health Association, 1980
- Alcohol-Related Problems Seen at the Student Health ServicesJournal of American College Health Association, 1979