Abstract
ABSTRACT Research suggests a sense of purpose begins developing in earnest during adolescence, which may shape youth’s interests and resilience. Here, we explored the types of purpose orientations reflected in youth’s applications to a self-driven learning program, and how distinct pathways by which youth pursued these purposes moderated their resilience throughout the program. A content analysis of 356 youth’s (Mage = 16.53, 57.02% female) descriptions of and rationales for choosing their learning topics found that career, creative, and prosocial purposes were the most prevalent; and about 70% of participants indicated following proactive pathways toward purposes. Moreover, youth’s resilience significantly increased throughout the program, a pattern amplified among youth whose applications revealed a proactive purpose pathway (gradually developing and pursuing an interest) relative to reactive or social-learning pathways. Findings underscore important links between purpose pathways and resilience and have implications for designing learning opportunities that facilitate positive youth development.
Published Version
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have