Abstract :
Prior research on stressful events has largely
ignored their potential impact on motivational processes.
This study prospectively examined the association of a
stressful event with control strivings in the school-to-work
transition. Five waves of data on stressful events, control
strategies, and potential mediating variables were collected
from an adolescent sample in Berlin (N = 420) during the
year before high school graduation. The occurrence of a
stressful event (death of family member, parent divorce)
predicted a decline in general career-related and specific
apprenticeship-related control strivings. This association
was mediated by a decline in control-related means-ends
beliefs. Proximity to the deadline of graduation exacerbated
this association for apprenticeship-seeking control
strivings, but this effect was buffered by usage of selective
secondary control strategies (cognitive strategies to
enhance commitment to a goal). Thus, stressful events can
exacerbate challenges and require additional means of
control striving.