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Dive into the research topics where Barbara M. Newman is active.

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Featured researches published by Barbara M. Newman.


Youth & Society | 2000

Experiences of Urban Youth Navigating the Transition to Ninth Grade

Barbara M. Newman; Brenda J. Lohman; Philip R. Newman; Mary C. Myers; Victoria L. Smith

The study describes perceptions of the transition to ninth grade for low-income, urban, minority adolescents. Students who had a grade point average (GPA) of 3.0 or higher in middle school were interviewed about their school transition. Results focus on perceptions of the transition, major challenges, sources of support, and coping strategies. Students who continued to perform well in ninth grade were differentiated from those who had academic difficulties. Students described the transition to high school as including new academic challenges, a more complex environment, new social demands, and new interactions with teachers. High performers mentioned fewer challenges than low performers. High performers received more support from their immediate family, and many had friends who supported their academic goals. Students described three kinds of coping strategies: individual (be dedicated, stay focused), academic (study, keep up with homework), and social (hang with the right people). Implications focus on supporting academic success for urban youth.


Journal of Youth and Adolescence | 2001

Group Identity and Alienation: Giving the We Its Due.

Barbara M. Newman; Philip R. Newman

The purpose of this paper is to argue for greater understanding and valuing of group affiliation and the formation of allegiances to groups during early adolescence. An overemphasis on themes of individual identity, self-reliance, and autonomy as the developmental trajectory of adolescence leads to a lack of attention to the positive, normative mechanisms that permit young adolescents to achieve a sense of belonging and connection. We propose developmental processes which underlie the capacity for reflection about groups, 4 basic components of group identity, and 6 propositions about new capacities that emerge as young adolescents struggle with the dialectic between group identity and alienation. The final section suggests opportunities that can emerge through a more appropriate emphasis on group identity as a valued, normative aspect of development during the early adolescent years.


Journal of Family Issues | 2004

An Exploration of the Grandparent Caregiver Role

Laura Landry-Meyer; Barbara M. Newman

Using role theory to guide a qualitative analysis of 26 grandparents raising grandchildren, the role transition from grandparent to grandparent caregiver was explored. Participants were predominantly female, low income, married, with an average age of 53. On average, participants were raising 1.7 grandchildren for 4 years and at the time of interview had legal custody of the grandchildren. Face-to-face, semi-structured interviews were used. With a 92% interrater reliability, themes focused on the grandparent caregiver role being off-time or unexpected, achieving a sense of role clarity, and the experience of role conflict.


Journal of College Student Development | 2015

A Sense of Belonging Among College Students With Disabilities: An Emergent Theoretical Model

Annemarie Vaccaro; Meada Daly-Cano; Barbara M. Newman

Higher education research suggests that the development of a sense of belonging is key to academic success and persistence, yet we know little about how first-year students with disabilities develop a sense of belonging as they transition into and through their first year in postsecondary environments. Themes from a grounded theory study of 8 college students, most of whom had invisible disabilities, provided the foundation for an emerging model of belonging. Student narratives suggest there are interconnections between the development of a sense of belonging, self-advocacy, social relationships, and mastery of the student role for first-year students with disabilities.


Youth & Society | 2007

Matched or Mismatched Environments? The Relationship of Family and School Differentiation to Adolescents' Psychosocial Adjustment.

Brenda J. Lohman; Shelby A. Kaura; Barbara M. Newman

This study applies the family-systems concept of differentiation (the balance of autonomy-granting and connectedness) to another primary system of adolescent development—school. This study assessed the relationships among levels of family and school differentiation to the externalizing and internalizing behaviors, peer group membership, and academic achievement of 693 middle and high school students. High levels of family and school differentiation were correlated with all measures of well-being. Individuals in the low-low matched differentiation group had the lowest academic achievement, whereas individuals in the high-high matched differentiation group had the highest academic achievement. Students in the mismatched group, who had high differentiation with parents, but low differentiation with school, had lower grade point averages, higher school absences, and higher disciplinary actions than those in the mismatched group with high school differentiation and low parent differentiation.


Journal of student affairs research and practice | 2017

A Sense of Belonging Through the Eyes of First-Year LGBPQ Students

Annemarie Vaccaro; Barbara M. Newman

Using grounded theory methods, the authors examined how LGBPQ students developed a sense of belonging during the first year of college. Sense of belonging transformed and deepened over the year and was fostered in three different contexts: university, group, and friendship. It was influenced by sexual identity and outness, university messaging, and meaningful social interactions with groups and authentic friends. The authors offer four theoretical propositions that can be utilized by researchers and practitioners.


Youth & Society | 2016

Career Preparation of High School Students: A Multi-Country Study:

Jing Jian Xiao; Barbara M. Newman; Bie-shuein Chu

The purpose of this study was to examine factors associated with career preparation of high school students in four countries: China, Japan, South Korea, and the United States. The human bioecological theory was used as a framework to examine personal, process, and context factors associated with career preparation of the adolescents. Data were from a cross-national sample of more than 5,000 students in Grades 10 to 12. Results indicate that career planning and planning to attend a university after high school are distinct aspects of career preparation. Whereas process variables including interactions with parents about career planning and thinking about the future are related to the two aspects of career preparation across the four countries, other person and context predictors show country differences.


Journal of College Student Development | 2016

Development of a Sense of Belonging for Privileged and Minoritized Students: An Emergent Model

Annemarie Vaccaro; Barbara M. Newman

Abstract:This article reports findings from a constructionist grounded theory study with 51 first-year college students. We explored student definitions and development of a sense of belonging during their first year of college. Belonging for all participants was shaped by 3 themes: environmental perceptions, involvement, and relationships. Yet, there were vast differences in the ways students from privileged and minoritized social identity groups defined belonging and made meaning of the 3 emergent themes. A model of belonging for privileged and minoritized college students is presented.


Journal of College Student Development | 2018

Narrating the Self: A Grounded Theory Model of Emerging Purpose for College Students With Disabilities

Annemarie Vaccaro; Ezekiel Kimball; Adam Moore; Barbara M. Newman; Peter F. Troiano

Abstract: This article presents findings and a model from a constructivist grounded theory study about purpose development for college students with disabilities. The 59 participants, drawn from 4 different higher education institutions, self-identified as having 1 or more of a variety of disabilities. Students engaged in imagination, exploration, and integration as part of the developmental process of developing a sense of purpose. Important social contexts and intersecting social identities also influenced the narrative of self that students created regarding their purpose.


Journal of student affairs research and practice | 2018

“Not Gonna Hold Me Back”: Coping and Resilience in Students with Disabilities

Annemarie Vaccaro; Adam Moore; Ezekiel Kimball; Peter F. Troiano; Barbara M. Newman

A constructivist grounded theory study with 59 students with diverse disabilities from four different universities offers insight into coping strategies and long-term resilience for this rapidly growing, but marginalized, population. Embracing a strengths perspective, we present narratives from student exemplars who used creative coping strategies, drew upon past successes to develop successful coping patterns, and exuded resilience as they navigated challenging postsecondary learning environments. Findings reinforce the importance of person-centered student affairs practice.

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Philip R. Newman

University of Rhode Island

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Annemarie Vaccaro

University of Rhode Island

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Adam Moore

University of Rhode Island

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Ezekiel Kimball

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Peter F. Troiano

Central Connecticut State University

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Jing Jian Xiao

University of Rhode Island

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Bie-shuein Chu

University of Rhode Island

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