Publication date: Nov 01, 2024
This mixed-method longitudinal study examined American adolescents’ meaning making of salient COVID-19 pandemic events. Within phone interviews, adolescents (N = 124, M = 15. 76 years; 46% Latine) narrated their most emotionally impactful pandemic experience at two time points ~30 days apart between July 2020 and March 2021. Narratives were coded for (1) content (i. e., event-type, relation to the pandemic, and the valence of the event [positive or negative]), (2) linguistic markers of subjective event processing (internal state language such as positive emotion, negative emotion, and cognition words), (3) narrative meaning-making, and (4) the outcome of adolescents’ meaning-making (i. e., their “meanings made”). About 30% of adolescents spontaneously made meaning of their experience. Negative emotion words within narratives at time 1 positively predicted meaning making at time 2. Meaning making at time 1 predicted increased use of cognition words at time 2. Meaning making themes included: recognizing the threat of COVID-19, coping with a pandemic, and shifts in perspectives. Salient emotional experiences that occur during adolescence are likely to be remembered and contribute to one’s life story. This work provides a window into how the COVID-19 pandemic may have shaped adolescent development in the United States.
Concepts | Keywords |
---|---|
Adolescents | adolescence |
American | COVID‐19 pandemic |
Covid | emotional experiences |
July | internal state language |
Pandemic | meaning making |
Semantics
Type | Source | Name |
---|---|---|
disease | MESH | COVID-19 pandemic |
disease | MESH | adolescent development |