Skip to main content

Advertisement

Log in

Aspirations, Ability, and Support: Consumers’ Perceptions of Attending College

  • Published:
Community Mental Health Journal Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Abstract

Research examines aspirations and plans for college, perceptions of social support and acceptance, and perceived intellectual and emotional capacity for college reported by 80 adults with coping with serious mental illness. The role of␣consumers’ age, prior college experience, hospitalization history, and feelings of personal loss due to mental illness in accounting for their views about college is examined. In general, consumers expressed strong aspirations for college, provided a positive assessment of their intellectual abilities, and mixed feelings about their emotional capacity to attend college. Participants were generally very optimistic about the level of acceptance from faculty and students and support from family and friends if they were to attend college. Amount of personal loss expressed by consumers accounted for a significant amount of variance in their reported aspirations and perceived capacity for college beyond that of age, prior college experience, and number of recent psychiatric hospitalizations. Participants’ perceptions of support and acceptance were not related to total number of reported hospitalizations, but were positively related to the number of hospitalizations reported in the past year.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Similar content being viewed by others

References

  • M. Bateman (1997) ArticleTitleThe development of a statewide supported education program: Assessing consumer and family needs Psychiatric Rehabilitation Journal 21 16–23

    Google Scholar 

  • C. Bellamy C. T. Mowbray (1998) ArticleTitleSupported education as an empowerment intervention for people with mental illness Journal of Community Psychology 26 401–414

    Google Scholar 

  • M. E. Collins C. T. Mowbray D. Bybee (2000) ArticleTitleCharacteristics predicting successful outcomes of participants with severe mental illness in supported education Psychiatric Services 51 776–780

    Google Scholar 

  • J. A. Cook M. L. Solomon (1993) ArticleTitleThe Community Scholar Program: An outcome study of supported education for students with server mental illness Psychosocial Rehabilitation Journal 17 83–97

    Google Scholar 

  • J. A. Cook J. Yamaguchi M. L. Solomon (1993) ArticleTitleField-testing a postsecondary faculty in-service training for working with students who have psychiatric disabilities Psychiatric Rehabilitation Journal 17 157–169

    Google Scholar 

  • P. E. Deegan (1988) ArticleTitleRecovery: The lived experience of rehabilitation Psychosocial Rehabilitation Journal 11 11–19

    Google Scholar 

  • S. Dougherty C. Hastie J. Bernard S. Broadhurst L. Marcus (1992) ArticleTitleSupported education: A clubhouse experience Psychosocial Rehabilitation Journal 16 91–104

    Google Scholar 

  • M. A. Eppler B. A. Harju (1997) ArticleTitleAchievement motivation goals in relation to academic performance in traditional and nontraditional college students Research in Higher Education 38 557–573

    Google Scholar 

  • F. L. Hoffmann X. Mastrianni (1993) ArticleTitleThe role of supported education in the inpatient treatment of young adults. A two-site comparison Psychosocial Rehabilitation Journal 17 109–119

    Google Scholar 

  • D. P. Housel J. S. Hickey (1993) ArticleTitleSupported education in a community college for students with psychiatric disabilities: The Houston Community College Model Psychosocial Rehabilitation Journal 17 43–50

    Google Scholar 

  • R. C. Kessler C. L. Foster W. B. Saunders P. E. Stang (1995) ArticleTitleSocial consequences of Psychiatric disorders, I: Educational Attainment American Journal of Psychiatry 152 1026–1032

    Google Scholar 

  • S. Kinsella (1998) ArticleTitleA cross-discipline study of traditional and nontraditional college students College Student Journal 32 532–538

    Google Scholar 

  • H. J. Lieberman F. R. Goldberg J. Jed (1993) ArticleTitleHelping seriously mentally ill patients to become students Psychosocial Rehabilitation Journal 17 100–107

    Google Scholar 

  • P. MacGregor (1994) ArticleTitleGrief: The unrecognized parental response to mental illness in a child Social Work 39 160–166

    Google Scholar 

  • F. Miller J. Dworkin M. Ward D. Barone (1990) ArticleTitleA preliminary study of unresolved grief in families of seriously mentally ill patients Hospital and community psychiatry 41 1321–1325

    Google Scholar 

  • T. K. Miller R. B. Winston (1990) Assessing development from a psychosocial perspective D. G. Creamer (Eds) College student development: Theory and practice for the 1990s American College Personnel Association Washington DC 89–126

    Google Scholar 

  • E. A. Morris P. R. Brooks J. L. Day (2003) ArticleTitleThe relationship between achievement goal orientation and coping style: Traditional vs. nontraditional college students College Student Journal 37 3–8

    Google Scholar 

  • C. T. Mowbray M. E. Collins (2002) The effectiveness of supported education: Current research findings C. T. Mowbray K. S. Brown K. Furlong-Norman A. S. Soydan (Eds) Supported education and psychiatric rehabilitation models and methods. International Association of Psychosocial Rehabilitation Services Linthicum, MD

    Google Scholar 

  • C. T. Mowbray D. P. Moxley K. S. Brown (1993) ArticleTitleA framework for initiating supported education programs Psychosocial Rehabilitation Journal 17 129–149

    Google Scholar 

  • R. A. Neimeyer (2001) The language of loss: Grief therapy as a process of meaning reconstruction R. A. Neimeyer (Eds) Meaning reconstruction and the experience of loss American Psychological Association Washington DC 55–76

    Google Scholar 

  • C. Pettella D. L. Tarnoczy (1996) ArticleTitleSupported education: Functional techniques for success Psychiatric Rehabilitation Journal 20 37–41

    Google Scholar 

  • P. Solomon J. Draine (1996) ArticleTitleExamination of grief among family members of individuals with serious and persistent mental illness Psychiatric Quarterly 67 221–234

    Google Scholar 

  • Stein, C. H., Dworsky, D. O., Phillips, R. E., & Hunt, M. G. (2005). Measuring personal loss among adults coping with serious mental illness. Community Mental Health Journal, 41, 129--139

    Google Scholar 

  • C. H. Stein V. A. Wemmerus (2001) ArticleTitleSearching for a normal life: Personal accounts of adults with schiozphrenia, their parents and well-siblings American Journal of Community Psychology 29 725–746

    Google Scholar 

  • A. P. Sullivan D. L. Nicolellis K. S. Danley K. MacDonald-Wilson (1993) ArticleTitleChoose-get-keep: A psychiatric rehabilitation approach to supported education Psychosocial Rehabilitation Journal 17 55–68

    Google Scholar 

  • K. V. Unger (1990) ArticleTitleSupported education for persons with mental illness: Definition and models American Rehabilitation 16 10–14

    Google Scholar 

  • K. V. Unger (1994) ArticleTitleAccess to education programs and its effect on employability Psychosocial Rehabilitation Journal 17 117–125

    Google Scholar 

  • K. V. Unger W. A. Anthony K. Sciarappa E. S. Rogers (1991) ArticleTitleA supported education program for young adults with long-term mental illness Hospital and Community Psychiatry 42 838–842

    Google Scholar 

  • US Department of Education (2002). Context of secondary education. In US Department of Education, The condition of education [Publication No. NCES 2002025]. Retrieved February 19, 2004, from US Department of Education Research Online via www. ed.gov

Download references

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Catherine H. Stein Ph.D..

Additional information

The author would like to thank participants in the research and extend appreciation to Shelley Lossier, Amy Johnson, Rob Cunningham, Mark Baron, and Carol Mowbray for their support and assistance.

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

Stein, C.H. Aspirations, Ability, and Support: Consumers’ Perceptions of Attending College. Community Ment Health J 41, 451–468 (2005). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10597-005-5080-0

Download citation

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10597-005-5080-0

Key words

Navigation