“Where we’ve been, and what we’ve over is key”: the role of campus environment on development of recovery identity in members of a collegiate recovery program
Loading...
Date
Authors
Workman, Christine L.
Advisors
License
DOI
Type
Thesis
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Grantor
Abstract
The purpose of the phenomenoloical study was to understand the lived experiences of
student participants in a collegiate recovery program, with a focus on recovery identity
development. At the core of this study were two identities—recovery identity, “who am I,
as a person in recovery?”, and social identity, “who am I as a member of my campus
community, as a person in recovery?”. Research is lacking on how campus environment
may impact recovery identity development of collegiate recovery program members. The
researcher conducted a phenomenological study including in-depth personal interviews
with students involved in a collegiate recovery program. At the site institution 12 students
were members of the on-campus collegiate recovery program and 6 individual interviews
were conducted. Interviews were digitally recorded and then after being sent to a
transcription service, the researcher listened to each session multiple times to discern
categories and themes. The findings demonstrated that participation in the campus
environment was influenced by the degree to which safety, inclusion, and sense of
belonging was established. The connection to people and place contributed to participants
feeling more supported, hopeful for the future, and empowered to succeed in recovery.