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Coping, Confidence, and Change Within the Academy: A Longitudinal Look at Police Recruits

NCJ Number
255187
Journal
Police Practice and Research Volume: 17 Issue: 3 Dated: 2016 Pages: 263-278
Author(s)
William P. McCarty; Daniel S. Lawrence
Date Published
2016
Length
16 pages
Annotation
Based on surveys of police recruits representing four agencies across the United States, this study asked them about their coping strategies and the confidence they had in performing their jobs.
Abstract

The police recruits were surveyed at the beginning and end of their academy training. The survey found that coping shifted significantly over time, with recruits utilizing task-oriented and outreach strategies less frequently at the end of the academy than at the beginning. Avoidance coping strategies were used more frequently by recruits at the end of the academy than at the beginning. Slight changes were also found in the influence of these strategies on job confidence over time, with avoidance coping having a stronger influence in the beginning of the academy than at the end. The role of demographic factors on coping was largely invariant over time, with only slight differences detected. Implications for policy and research are also discussed. (publisher abstract modified)