Identity in Transition: How College Experiences, Relationships, and Digital Distractions Shape Student Role Formation
College doesn’t just change what you study. It changes how you see yourself, often in ways that aren’t obvious while they’re happening. You arrive with some idea of who you are, shaped by school, family, and whatever you’ve been told you’re “good at.” But once you’re there, that idea starts to shift. Not all at once, not in a clear direction, but gradually, through everyday experiences that feel ordinary at the time. Classes are part of it, but they’re only one layer. There are pressure assignments, deadlines, expectations, but there’s also freedom. No one is watching you the way they used to. No one is structuring your time for you. And that freedom can feel both exciting and unstable at the same time. You’re given space, but you’re also expected to figure out what to do with it. That’s where identity starts to form in a different way, not just from what you’re told, but from what you choose. At first, those choices are small: when you study, how you spend your evenings, who you talk ...