Graduate students as academic writers: writing anxiety, self-efficacy, and emotional intelligence
Graduate students as academic writers: writing anxiety, self-efficacy, and emotional intelligence
Researchers interested in psychological factors affecting writers in higher-education institutions, or academic writers, are concerned with internal variables affecting writing productivity; however few empirical studies explore these factors with samples of students who are in the process of earning master’s or doctoral degrees (i.e., graduate students). In this study, we examined writing anxiety, self-efficacy and emotional intelligence (EI) in a sample of graduate students at a large, research-intensive university in the United States. Using a survey, we collected measures on these variables in addition to demographic information from the participants. We then used the measures to descriptively compare groups of students with similar characteristics and to run three regression models to identify which variables best predicted writing anxiety. Our findings indicate self-efficacy is a statistically significant and large predictor of writing anxiety while EI is not, though descriptive data showed moderate effects between EI and first language (i.e., whether or not a student reported English as a first language). In the presence of self-efficacy, gender remained a significant predictor of writing anxiety, while first language did not. We discuss implications for future research and practice focused on helping graduate student academic writers succeed.
Huerta, Margarita
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Goodson, Patricia
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Beigi, Mina
2986037e-5bb3-4ec0-be55-bf291ac17e24
Chlup, Dominique
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4 October 2016
Huerta, Margarita
ef960ac7-5f80-4d32-b4b5-937d53aa5240
Goodson, Patricia
3a36e897-eaf3-4bd8-adfa-441f036c57ef
Beigi, Mina
2986037e-5bb3-4ec0-be55-bf291ac17e24
Chlup, Dominique
c43fc3db-ad5d-4caa-af0d-4be0b2e7e768
Huerta, Margarita, Goodson, Patricia, Beigi, Mina and Chlup, Dominique
(2016)
Graduate students as academic writers: writing anxiety, self-efficacy, and emotional intelligence.
Higher Education Research & Development, 36 (4).
(doi:10.1080/07294360.2016.1238881).
Abstract
Researchers interested in psychological factors affecting writers in higher-education institutions, or academic writers, are concerned with internal variables affecting writing productivity; however few empirical studies explore these factors with samples of students who are in the process of earning master’s or doctoral degrees (i.e., graduate students). In this study, we examined writing anxiety, self-efficacy and emotional intelligence (EI) in a sample of graduate students at a large, research-intensive university in the United States. Using a survey, we collected measures on these variables in addition to demographic information from the participants. We then used the measures to descriptively compare groups of students with similar characteristics and to run three regression models to identify which variables best predicted writing anxiety. Our findings indicate self-efficacy is a statistically significant and large predictor of writing anxiety while EI is not, though descriptive data showed moderate effects between EI and first language (i.e., whether or not a student reported English as a first language). In the presence of self-efficacy, gender remained a significant predictor of writing anxiety, while first language did not. We discuss implications for future research and practice focused on helping graduate student academic writers succeed.
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Graduate Students as Academic Writers- Accepted Version
- Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 11 July 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 4 October 2016
Published date: 4 October 2016
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 413269
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/413269
ISSN: 0729-4360
PURE UUID: 81593ab2-3fc2-4150-975f-3649408b5ebd
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Date deposited: 18 Aug 2017 16:31
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 05:39
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Author:
Margarita Huerta
Author:
Patricia Goodson
Author:
Dominique Chlup
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