Funny Students Cope Better: Patterns of Humor Enactment and Coping Effectiveness |
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Authors: | Melanie Booth-Butterfield Steven Booth-Butterfield Melissa Wanzer |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Communication Studies , West Virginia University , mbooth@wvu.edu |
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Abstract: | Increasingly, college students are employed in jobs outside of class—and contend with additional stressors as a result—when they attempt to balance work and academic demands. Enacting humorous communication is one productive way to handle such stress. In a college student, the replication of the process of using humor to cope with job stress (i.e., higher humor orientation, HO) was associated with higher ratings of effectiveness, greater self-perceived coping effectiveness, and subsequently with higher job satisfaction. Path analysis demonstrated that, as the transactional theory would predict, students' trait HO influences their job satisfaction through its effect on heightened coping efficacy. Results indicated that, across two very different sample populations, college students and fully employed adults are extremely similar in the process and benefits of using humor to cope. |
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Keywords: | Coping Emotional Expressivity Humor Orientation Job Satisfaction |
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