Subjective well-being of college students: Developmental trajectories, predictors, and risk for depression

Research Article

Subjective well-being of college students: Developmental trajectories, predictors, and risk for depression

Published in: Journal of Psychology in Africa
Volume 34 , issue 5 , 2024 , pages: 477–486
DOI: 10.1080/14330237.2024.2398871
Author(s): Xinqiao Liu Tianjin University, China , Yan Li Tianjin University, China , Wenjuan Gao Institute of Higher Education, Beihang University, China

Abstract

The study aimed to identify different developmental trajectories of subjective well-being for 2 473 college students from freshman to senior year (female = 47.15%; mean age = 19.6 years, SD = 0.894 years). We further explored the associations between categories of well-being development and depression levels across different groups of subjective well-being. Students completed a longitudinal survey over four academic years, self-reporting their subjective well-being, mental state, demographic characteristics, family background, and academic performance. Growth mixture model analysis revealed three distinct developmental trajectories of college students’ subjective well-being: high stable (HS), low increasing (LI), and high decreasing (HD). Factors such as sex, physical health, self-esteem, parental education level, and peer relationships were significantly associated with the subjective well-being classification trajectories. In addition, a stable and high level of subjective well-being was associated with lower risk for depression. The results indicate the importance of subjective well-being practices for students’ long-term schooling-related quality of life.

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