top of page
Search
  • Maheen

Blog Post #5: Bibliography

Cooper, Melinda.  “In Loco Parentis: Human Capital, Student Debt, and the Logic of Family Investment.”  Family Values: Between Neoliberalism and the New Social Conservatism.  Zone Books, 2017.  215-257.


Zaloom, Caitlin. “Enmeshed Autonomy.” Indebted: How Families Make College Work at Any Cost. Princeton UP, 2019. 95-121.


Patterson AC. "Does the mortality risk of social isolation depend upon socioeconomic factors?" Journal of Health Psychology, 2016. 2420-2433.


Cheng G, Zhang D, Ding F. "Self-esteem and fear of negative evaluation as mediators between family socioeconomic status and social anxiety in Chinese emerging adults." International Journal of Social Psychiatry, 2015. 569-576.


Vilaplana-Pérez A, Pérez-Vigil A, Sidorchuk A, et al. "Much more than just shyness: the impact of social anxiety disorder on educational performance across the lifespan." Psychological medicine, 2020. 1-9.


Karlsen BS, Clench-Aas J, Van Roy B, Raanaas RK. "Relationships between Social Anxiety and Mental Health Problems in Early Adolescents from Different Socioeconomic Groups": Results from a Cross-sectional Health Survey in Norway. 2014.



2 views0 comments

Recent Posts

See All

Blog Post #10: Abstract and Works Cited

Abstract: A lot of research has been done to show that social isolation can become a huge health risk of not taken care of properly. Many scientists and researchers compare social isolation to smoking

Blog Post #9: Argument and Counter Argument

My primary argument for the paper will be that less affluent students are more at risk of social isolation and relating problems such as depression and anxiety. I will explain both the causes and some

Blog Post #8: Case

1. Less affluent students are more likely to face social isolation and relating problems than more affluent students. - More stress - Less time - Have jobs to support themselves 2. Social isolation ca

bottom of page