Academic buoyancy in secondary school: Exploring patterns of convergence in English, mathematics, science, and physical education
Academic buoyancy in secondary school: Exploring patterns of convergence in English, mathematics, science, and physical education
Past research into the ability of students to 'bounce back' from everyday academic setback (academic buoyancy) has lacked sensitivity to the contexts in which children demonstrate this behavior. Here we aimed to contextualize past findings by reporting the results of an exploratory investigation that featured: (1) repeated measurement of students' self-reported buoyancy across English, mathematics, science, and physical education; (2) measures of students' psychological appraisal as a test of external validity; (3) a novel national context (England rather than Australia). In total 260 English secondary school students aged 11-16. years completed self-report questionnaires. Students were found to hold relatively consistent views about their ability to bounce back from everyday academic setbacks (e.g., negative feedback, poor results, study stress or pressure) compared to the relatively less consistent views they held regarding the difficulty of the four school subjects as well as corresponding personal competences and effort. These results are discussed in the context of past research, the implications for interventions, and the need for further confirmatory investigations.
Academic buoyancy, Competence, Construct validity, Difficulty, Domain specificity, Effort
262-266
Malmberg, Lars Erik
dcca86e9-5e03-4288-9a81-f29a50e04936
Hall, James
29e17a2b-dca0-4b91-be02-2ace4abaa6c4
Martin, Andrew J.
1ede8446-8618-42f3-85b1-21114c022785
February 2013
Malmberg, Lars Erik
dcca86e9-5e03-4288-9a81-f29a50e04936
Hall, James
29e17a2b-dca0-4b91-be02-2ace4abaa6c4
Martin, Andrew J.
1ede8446-8618-42f3-85b1-21114c022785
Malmberg, Lars Erik, Hall, James and Martin, Andrew J.
(2013)
Academic buoyancy in secondary school: Exploring patterns of convergence in English, mathematics, science, and physical education.
Learning and Individual Differences, 23 (1), .
(doi:10.1016/j.lindif.2012.07.014).
Abstract
Past research into the ability of students to 'bounce back' from everyday academic setback (academic buoyancy) has lacked sensitivity to the contexts in which children demonstrate this behavior. Here we aimed to contextualize past findings by reporting the results of an exploratory investigation that featured: (1) repeated measurement of students' self-reported buoyancy across English, mathematics, science, and physical education; (2) measures of students' psychological appraisal as a test of external validity; (3) a novel national context (England rather than Australia). In total 260 English secondary school students aged 11-16. years completed self-report questionnaires. Students were found to hold relatively consistent views about their ability to bounce back from everyday academic setbacks (e.g., negative feedback, poor results, study stress or pressure) compared to the relatively less consistent views they held regarding the difficulty of the four school subjects as well as corresponding personal competences and effort. These results are discussed in the context of past research, the implications for interventions, and the need for further confirmatory investigations.
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Published date: February 2013
Keywords:
Academic buoyancy, Competence, Construct validity, Difficulty, Domain specificity, Effort
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Local EPrints ID: 414568
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/414568
ISSN: 1041-6080
PURE UUID: 3889039d-affd-4073-aad2-53be50ec27ce
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Date deposited: 04 Oct 2017 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:31
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Author:
Lars Erik Malmberg
Author:
Andrew J. Martin
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