Search results for "study engagement"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

The role of study engagement in university students' daily experiences: A multilevel test of moderation

2019

The present study investigated the dynamic nature of students' daily experiences and general study engagement using intra-individual assessment. More specifically, we examined individual differences in the relationship between university students' task-specific value and situational emotions and, further, whether first-year study engagement would moderate this association during the first two years of studies. Intra-individual state assessments were conducted via mobile phone-based experience sampling method (ESM) during participants' first (N = 72) and second (N = 56) academic years, resulting in 3089 and 2912 fully completed state questionnaires. In both years, students were asked five ti…

Experience sampling methodSocial PsychologyContext (language use)BurnoutStructural equation modelingEducationDevelopmental psychologysituational emotionsDaily experiencesDevelopmental and Educational Psychology0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesuniversity studentsSituational ethicstask-specific valueta515study engagementAcademic year4. Education05 social sciences050301 educationsitoutuminenModerationUniversity studentsTest (assessment)Task-specific valueopiskelukokemuksetSituational emotionskorkeakouluopiskelu516 Educational sciencesPsychologyStudy engagement0503 educationdaily experiences050104 developmental & child psychologyLearning and Individual Differences
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Study engagement and burnout profiles among Finnish higher education students

2017

A person-oriented approach was applied to identify profiles of study engagement and burnout (i.e., exhaustion, cynicism, inadequacy) in higher education in a large and representative sample of 12,394 higher education students at different phases of their studies in universities and polytechnics in Finland. Four profiles were identified: Engaged (44%), engaged-exhausted (30%) inefficacious (19%) and burned-out (7%). The engaged students had the most positive engagement accompanied with the least burnout symptoms compared to other groups. The engaged-exhausted students experienced emotional exhaustion simultaneously with academic engagement. The inefficacious group had heightened experience o…

profilesBF PsychologyLB2300 Higher EducationHigher educationlcsh:RC435-571väsymyslcsh:BF1-990Student engagementBurnoutuupumusstudy burnoutCynicismstudy stagelcsh:Psychiatrypersons-oriented approachdemands-resources0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesopinnotEmotional exhaustionta515Academic careerstudy engagementopiskelijatDemands-resourcesbusiness.industry4. Education05 social sciencesperson-oriented approachPublic Health Environmental and Occupational Health050301 educationstressisitoutuminenPsychiatry and Mental healthlcsh:Psychologyhigher educationopiskelukorkea-asteen koulutus516 Educational sciencesPsychologybusiness0503 education050104 developmental & child psychologyClinical psychologyBurnout Research
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