PROJECT PAGE

Berkeley Longitudinal Study

The Berkeley Longitudinal Study (BLS) is a 23-year longitudinal study of 508 undergraduate students who entered the University of California at Berkeley in 1992. Participants were assessed six times while attending college: during their first week on campus, at the end of the first semester, and then at the end of Years 1, 2, 3, and 4. The sample was subsequently assessed for a seventh time approximately 20 years later (around 2015), when the participants were about 41 years old (N = 248). The BLS focuses on the achievement-related experiences, evaluations, attributions, interests, goals, and motives, with an emphasis on factors that contribute to the development of personality and self-esteem. The 20-year follow-up includes a wider range of variables, including measures of work and family experiences and outcomes. Most of the data are self-report, but there are a number of variables (e.g., SAT scores, high school GPA, cumulative college GPA, attrition) obtained from university records as well as peer ratings of behavior and performance in a group interaction task. The NEO-FFI was administered at the very beginning of college, at the end of the fourth year, and again in the 20-year follow-up, spanning approximately 23 years.

Principal Investigator(s): Dr. Richard W. Robins and Dr. Brent W. Roberts


General Information

Country of Data Collection: USA

Years of Data Collection: 1992-2016

Study Status: Ongoing

Total Number of Assessments Completed: 7

Approx. Retention Rate: 50% (range = 40-60%, except for Semester 1 assessment which was about 90%)

Sample

Composition: College student sample (recruited from introductory psychology course)

Sample Size
0
Median Age at First Assessment
0
Median Age at Last Assessment
0

Sex

Female
0

SES

Upper Class
0
Middle Class
0
Lower Class
0

Race/Ethnicity

Asian
0
White, non-Hispanic
0
Chicano/Latino
0
Black/African-American
0
Multiracial/Other
0
Personality Data
Construct

Big Five

Self-Esteem

Narcissism

Optimism

Depression

Scale

NEO-Five Factor Inventory

Rosenberg Self-Esteem

Narcissistic Personality Inv.

Life Orientation Test

Center for Epidemiological Studies of Depression

Waves

T1, T6, T7

T1, T2, T3, T4, T5, T6, T7 

T1, T7 

T5, T6, T7

T3, T4, T5, T6, T7

Method

Self-Report

Self-Report

Self-Report

Self-Report

Self-Report

Academic/school

growth mindset

Happiness, well-being, life satisfaction

job/work

life events

mental health

Data Access

Project Website: NA

Codebook Available Online: No

Data Available Online: No

Project Proposal Required to Use Data: Yes, email contact

Contact

Contact: Richard W. Robins (rwrobins@ucdavis.edu)