Developmental Themes in the Narrative of Adults with Early International Experiences

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Developmental Themes in the Narrative of Adults with Early International Experiences
Abstract
This study extends research on adult narrative identity in two major ways. First, it focuses on Adult Third Culture Kids (ATCKs), which refer to individuals who spent a part of their early developmental years abroad. In spite of the fact that they are an important demographic to study in this rapidly globalizing world, they have tended to be neglected in the field of psychology. Second, this study incorporates the cutting-edge tools of automated language analysis to extract developmental themes from autobiographical narratives using a bottom-up exploratory approach, as well as to identify psychological patterns and processes associated with the themes. The participants (N = 350; 18–80 + years old) were recruited from an alumni office of an international school and asked to write a narrative about the impact their international experiences had on their development. The meaning extraction method (MEM) yielded four developmental themes, which were remarkably consistent with the recurring themes that emerge from past research on adult narrative identity as well as ATCKs: past focus, communion, agency, and global focus. These four developmental themes, in turn, showed theoretically coherent patterns of relations with the demographic variables, linguistic markers of psychological patterns and processes, as well as self-reports of dimensions of well-being.
Publication
Journal of Adult Development
Date
2023-10-04
Journal Abbr
J Adult Dev
Citation Key
abeDevelopmentalThemesNarrative2023
Accessed
11/7/23, 7:37 PM
ISSN
1573-3440
Language
en
Library Catalog
Springer Link
Citation
Abe, J. A. A. (2023). Developmental Themes in the Narrative of Adults with Early International Experiences. Journal of Adult Development. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10804-023-09464-5