STABILITY OF INTERESTS AFTER SEVERE PHYSICAL-DISABILITY - AN 11-YEAR LONGITUDINAL-STUDY

Authors
Citation
De. Rohe et Js. Krause, STABILITY OF INTERESTS AFTER SEVERE PHYSICAL-DISABILITY - AN 11-YEAR LONGITUDINAL-STUDY, Journal of vocational behavior, 52(1), 1998, pp. 45-58
Citations number
28
Categorie Soggetti
Psychology, Applied
ISSN journal
00018791
Volume
52
Issue
1
Year of publication
1998
Pages
45 - 58
Database
ISI
SICI code
0001-8791(1998)52:1<45:SOIASP>2.0.ZU;2-P
Abstract
The longitudinal stability of Locational interests of males with traum atic spinal cord injury was studied over 11 years. In this follow-up s tudy, a sample of 117 males with spinal cord injury who had completed the Strong Campbell Interest Inventory 11 years earlier (Rohe & Athels tan, 1985) was recontacted, and of the 96 available subjects, 79 (82%) completed the Strong Interest Inventory (SII). Their average age at i njury was 24.3 years. Their average ages at the time of the first and second inventory administrations were 32.8 and 43.8 years, respectivel y. The sample was from the Midwestern United States and was primarily Caucasian. Seventy-four percent of the sample had quadriplegia, and 26 % had paraplegia. The initially completed Strong Campbell Interest Inv entories were rescored using the 1985 SII norms, and the resulting SII s were compared with the SIIs completed 11 years later on the General Occupational Themes, Basic Interests Scales, Occupational Scales, and Special Scales of the instrument. The results, which parallel and rein force those reported in the original study, indicated that (a) the int erests of males with spinal cord injury are as stable as those of simi lar-aged nondisabled samples, (b) anticipated age-related increases in scales associated with artistic and social interests and normative ag e-related decreases in scales associated with physically demanding and adventuresome activities did not occur, and (c) interests that reflec t forceful interaction with the general public decreased. (C) 1998 Aca demic Press.