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  4             <TITLE>Edequity On Line: Women Feeling More Stress in College</TITLE>
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  9             <H1 ALIGN=CENTER>Women Feeling More Stress in College</H1>
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 19             <STRONG>AMcAuliffe</STRONG> (<A HREF="mailto:AMcAuliffe@edc.org?subject=Re:%20Women%20Feeling%20More%20Stress%20in%20College"><EM>AMcAuliffe@edc.org</EM></A>)<BR>
 20             <EM>Tue, 26 Jan 1999 08:56:18 -0500</EM>
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 37             Forwarded from HECNews.
 38             <BR>
 39             <A HREF="mailto:AMcAuliffe@edc.org?subject=Re:%20Women%20Feeling%20More%20Stress%20in%20College">AMcAuliffe@edc.org</A>
 40             <BR>
 41             _____________________________________________________________________
 42             <BR>
 43 rizwank 1.1 <P>Monday, January 25, 1999
 44             <BR>
 45             <P>Women Feeling More Stress in College
 46             <BR>
 47             <P>School: Freshmen say they are 'overwhelmed,' worry more than male
 48             <BR>
 49             counterparts, according to nationwide survey. Growing gender gap is linked
 50             <BR>
 51             in part to lifestyle differences.
 52             <BR>
 53             <P>By KENNETH R. WEISS, Times Education Writer
 54             <BR>
 55             <P><P>Women have closed the gender gap in college enrollment, but another gap has
 56             <BR>
 57             widened: College women are working harder and feeling more stress while
 58             <BR>
 59             their male counterparts are having a good time.
 60             <BR>
 61             <P>In a nationwide survey of college freshmen to be released today, women are
 62             <BR>
 63             five times as likely to be anxious as men, reporting they frequently felt
 64 rizwank 1.1 <BR>
 65             &quot;overwhelmed by all I have to do.&quot;
 66             <BR>
 67             <P>These young women are smoking more than men. More of them say they
 68             <BR>
 69             frequently felt depressed in the last year, more are worried about paying
 70             <BR>
 71             for college and feel insecure about their physical and emotional health.
 72             <BR>
 73             <P>Gender differences in lifestyle seem to contribute to the growing stress
 74             <BR>
 75             gap. During the last year, teenage men spent considerably more time
 76             <BR>
 77             exercising, partying, watching TV and playing video games, while women were
 78             <BR>
 79             juggling more household and child care chores, studying more and doing more
 80             <BR>
 81             volunteer work.
 82             <BR>
 83             <P>&quot;Men are spending more time doing things that inherently can be more fun,&quot;
 84             <BR>
 85 rizwank 1.1 said Linda J. Sax, director of the 33rd annual survey, conducted by UCLA's
 86             <BR>
 87             Higher Education Research Institute.
 88             <BR>
 89             <P>&quot;Meanwhile, these young women are taking on more and more responsibilities
 90             <BR>
 91             and feel stressed by all they have to do.&quot;
 92             <BR>
 93             <P>Survey founder Alexander W. Astin calls the stress gap, which began widening in
 94             <BR>
 95             the mid-1980s, &quot;one of the ironies of the women's movement.&quot;
 96             <BR>
 97             <P>&quot;It's an inevitable consequence of women adding more commitments and
 98             <BR>
 99             responsibilities on top of all the other things they have to cope with,&quot; he
100             <BR>
101             said.
102             <BR>
103             <P>Astin, who has tracked shifting student attitudes for 35 years, notes that
104             <BR>
105             college students are experiencing an early version of the stress that
106 rizwank 1.1 <BR>
107             &quot;super-moms&quot; feel later in life--pursuing a career, maintaining a household
108             <BR>
109             and raising kids.
110             <BR>
111             <P>Pretty soon, he predicted, life insurance tables will start changing, too.
112             <BR>
113             Now, women live on average several years longer than men, a fact that some
114             <BR>
115             experts have attributed to lower stress levels among women.
116             <BR>
117             <P>If all that isn't enough, here's another producer of anxiety, at least for
118             <BR>
119             those women interested in the dating scene: Women make up nearly 56% of
120             <BR>
121             college enrollment and the female majority is expected to grow over the next
122             <BR>
123             decade.
124             <BR>
125             <P>A group of freshmen at UCLA said the survey results seemed pretty much on
126             <BR>
127 rizwank 1.1 target. Some of the women said they often feel overwhelmed: They &quot;stressed&quot;
128             <BR>
129             about getting into UCLA. Then they felt stressed about whether attending
130             <BR>
131             UCLA was their best option. Now, they're worried about making new
132             <BR>
133             friends--and even which classes to take.
134             <BR>
135             <P>To hear Jessica Wolf tell it, time is already running short at age 18. With
136             <BR>
137             one term behind her, she needs to hurry up and declare an academic major.
138             <BR>
139             &quot;There is more pressure to succeed and be more than a mother and homemaker,&quot; she
140             <BR>
141             said. &quot;By the time I finally get to a point in my career where I'm a success,
142             <BR>
143             I'll have to stop work to start a family. So I need to know what I'm doing now.&quot;
144             <BR>
145             <P>The annual American Freshman Survey, the nation's oldest and most
146             <BR>
147             comprehensive assessment of student behavior and attitudes, canvassed
148 rizwank 1.1 <BR>
149             383,815 of the 1.6 million first-year students at colleges and universities
150             <BR>
151             in the United States.
152             <BR>
153             <P>Nearly 71% of women were at least somewhat concerned about financing their
154             <BR>
155             college education, compared to 58.5% of men. About 16.5% of women said they
156             <BR>
157             smoked frequently within the last year, compared to about 15% of men. Nearly 11%
158             <BR>
159             of women reported that they frequently felt depressed, compared to 7.3% of men.
160             <BR>
161             <P>About 38% of women reported they frequently &quot;felt overwhelmed&quot; with all they had
162             <BR>
163             to do, compared to a mere 7.3% of men. Comparing their emotional health with
164             <BR>
165             their peers, 58.2% of men considered themselves above average or in the top 10%
166             <BR>
167             for people their age. Only 47.5% of women considered themselves above average or
168             <BR>
169 rizwank 1.1 better.
170             <BR>
171             <P>Men were also far more sure about their physical health, with nearly 65%
172             <BR>
173             ranking themselves above average or in the top 10% of their peers. Only
174             <BR>
175             about 46% of women had such confidence.
176             <BR>
177             <P>&quot;Body image is a huge part of it,&quot; said freshman Tara Firenzi, a blue-eyed,
178             <BR>
179             blond-haired dancer. &quot;I've been stressed out since I got to UCLA. You just
180             <BR>
181             look around and say, 'Jeez, she's a size 2.' &quot;
182             <BR>
183             <P>Survey director Sax said she and other college officials worry about such
184             <BR>
185             insecurities. &quot;Women often express less confidence in their abilities, even
186             <BR>
187             though their performance is often better than men.&quot;
188             <BR>
189             <P>To be sure, young women may be more likely than young men to own up to
190 rizwank 1.1 <BR>
191             feelings of stress or depression. But unless female teenagers have become
192             <BR>
193             more forthcoming--or males less so--the difference in their willingness to
194             <BR>
195             discuss their feelings would not account for the widening of the stress gap
196             <BR>
197             over the last decade.
198             <BR>
199             <P>The survey also revealed other trends, including its first snapshot of the
200             <BR>
201             remarkable number of students using the Internet.
202             <BR>
203             <P>A whopping 82.9% of freshmen said they use the Internet for research or
204             <BR>
205             homework, and nearly two-thirds communicate via e-mail, the survey showed.
206             <BR>
207             About four out of five freshmen play computer games, and a little more than
208             <BR>
209             half regularly join in online discussions in chat rooms.
210             <BR>
211 rizwank 1.1 <P>&quot;Part of what I was looking forward to in college was the Internet network,&quot;
212             <BR>
213             said Rizwan Kassim, a self-professed computer junkie living in a UCLA freshman
214             <BR>
215             dorm. &quot;I have no intention of leaving here until I can secure
216             <BR>
217             high-speed access off campus.&quot;
218             <BR>
219             <P>But Internet access is not equal for all students.
220             <BR>
221             <P>Although about 80% of students attending private universities use e-mail,
222             <BR>
223             that figure falls to only about 41% at traditionally black colleges.
224             <BR>
225             <P>When comparing incoming freshmen who had used the Internet for homework or
226             <BR>
227             research at least once in the last year, however, the disparity between
228             <BR>
229             students from private universities and black colleges was much less
230             <BR>
231             pronounced. This suggests that students had Internet access in either their
232 rizwank 1.1 <BR>
233             high schools or public libraries.
234             <BR>
235             <P>But such access seems to vary widely in the home, given the spread of
236             <BR>
237             students who reported frequent or occasional use of e-mail. Broken down by
238             <BR>
239             ethnicity, 79.3% of Asian American students reported at least occasional use of
240             <BR>
241             e-mail, compared to 68.3% of whites, 42.5% of African Americans, 51.7% of
242             <BR>
243             Mexican Americans and 65.2% of all other Latinos.
244             <BR>
245             <P>As schools incorporate computers into their curriculum, Astin said,
246             <BR>
247             &quot;colleges and universities should be aware of the different levels of
248             <BR>
249             computing experience among incoming freshmen.&quot;
250             <BR>
251             <P>Source: <A HREF="http://www.latimes.com/HOME/NEWS/ASECTION/t000007602.html">http://www.latimes.com/HOME/NEWS/ASECTION/t000007602.html</A>
252             <BR>
253 rizwank 1.1 <P>------------------------------------------------------------
254             <BR>
255             Forwarded by the Higher Education Center for Alcohol and Other
256             <BR>
257             Drug Prevention.  For more information, see our website at
258             <BR>
259             <A HREF="http://www.edc.org/hec/">http://www.edc.org/hec/</A>
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