Personality and well-being in Black and White South African emerging adults
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Date
2017Author
Nel, Jan Alewyn
Van de Vijver, Fons J.R.
Adams, Byron G.
Laher, Sumaya
Louw, Johann
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Background:
In the last ten years, the South African Personality Inventory
(SAPI) has been developed as an indigenous measurement
of personality for the multi-cultural environment of
South Africa. The aim of the SAPI is to assess personality
in an unbiased and equivalent way. For the purpose of this
study, we used an 82-item version of the SAPI which measures
nine factors (Conscientiousness, Emotional Stability,
Extraversion, Facilitating, Integrity, Intellect, Openness,
Relationship Harmony and Soft-heartedness).
Participants and procedure:
A cross-sectional survey was conducted using the SAPI,
the General Health Questionnaire and the Brief Multidimensional
Student Life Satisfaction Scale. A purposive
sample was drawn from Black and White emerging adults
(N = 990). We assessed the relationship between personality
aspects and well-being across groups in a multiple
group structural equation model (SEM) using the SPSS
and AMOS programs.
Results:
Black emerging adults showed evidence of more individualistic-
inclined personality features, while the White emerging
adults seem to demonstrate more collectivistic features.
In terms of health, the White emerging adults experience
more life satisfaction than their Black counterparts. Conscientiousness,
emotional stability, extraversion, facilitating
and openness predict well-being among emerging adults.
Conclusions:
This study contributes to expanding the nomological network
of the SAPI, and it enhances knowledge pertaining to
the link between personality and well-being of emerging
adults in South Africa. Understanding which factors contribute
to poor mental health and lack of life satisfaction
may lead to innovation programmes for emerging adults
to assist them in dealing with negative health outcomes
possibly associated with living in multicultural contexts.