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Academic buoyancy and psychological risk: Exploring reciprocal relationships

Academic buoyancy and psychological risk: Exploring reciprocal relationships
Academic buoyancy and psychological risk: Exploring reciprocal relationships

Based on hypothesized reciprocal relations between psychological risk and academic buoyancy (dealing with 'everyday' academic setback in the ordinary course of school life), the present study used cross-lagged structural equation models to examine the relative salience of (1) prior academic buoyancy in predicting subsequent psychological risk and (2) prior psychological risk in predicting subsequent academic buoyancy. Academic buoyancy and psychological risk (academic anxiety, failure avoidance, uncertain control, emotional instability, neuroticism) measures were administered to 2971 students (11-19. years) from 21 Australian high schools at two time waves across a one-year interval. Analyses confirmed a reciprocal effects model in which psychological risk impacts academic buoyancy and academic buoyancy impacts psychological risk. The findings hold applied and conceptual implications for practitioners and researchers seeking to help students deal more effectively with adversity in school life.

Academic buoyancy, Cross-lagged analysis, Psychological risk, Reciprocal effects model, Resilience
1041-6080
128-133
Martin, Andrew J.
1ede8446-8618-42f3-85b1-21114c022785
Ginns, Paul
777cfa13-d01f-4c48-a2bf-387dd54be6c2
Brackett, Marc A.
5e13f446-c70f-4760-835f-3e7ab94eee51
Malmberg, Lars Erik
dcca86e9-5e03-4288-9a81-f29a50e04936
Hall, James
29e17a2b-dca0-4b91-be02-2ace4abaa6c4
Martin, Andrew J.
1ede8446-8618-42f3-85b1-21114c022785
Ginns, Paul
777cfa13-d01f-4c48-a2bf-387dd54be6c2
Brackett, Marc A.
5e13f446-c70f-4760-835f-3e7ab94eee51
Malmberg, Lars Erik
dcca86e9-5e03-4288-9a81-f29a50e04936
Hall, James
29e17a2b-dca0-4b91-be02-2ace4abaa6c4

Martin, Andrew J., Ginns, Paul, Brackett, Marc A., Malmberg, Lars Erik and Hall, James (2013) Academic buoyancy and psychological risk: Exploring reciprocal relationships. Learning and Individual Differences, 27, 128-133. (doi:10.1016/j.lindif.2013.06.006).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Based on hypothesized reciprocal relations between psychological risk and academic buoyancy (dealing with 'everyday' academic setback in the ordinary course of school life), the present study used cross-lagged structural equation models to examine the relative salience of (1) prior academic buoyancy in predicting subsequent psychological risk and (2) prior psychological risk in predicting subsequent academic buoyancy. Academic buoyancy and psychological risk (academic anxiety, failure avoidance, uncertain control, emotional instability, neuroticism) measures were administered to 2971 students (11-19. years) from 21 Australian high schools at two time waves across a one-year interval. Analyses confirmed a reciprocal effects model in which psychological risk impacts academic buoyancy and academic buoyancy impacts psychological risk. The findings hold applied and conceptual implications for practitioners and researchers seeking to help students deal more effectively with adversity in school life.

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More information

Published date: October 2013
Keywords: Academic buoyancy, Cross-lagged analysis, Psychological risk, Reciprocal effects model, Resilience

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 414675
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/414675
ISSN: 1041-6080
PURE UUID: 87e0bf22-bb98-48cd-9fc7-fda40e42ea07
ORCID for James Hall: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8002-0922

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Date deposited: 05 Oct 2017 16:31
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:31

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Contributors

Author: Andrew J. Martin
Author: Paul Ginns
Author: Marc A. Brackett
Author: Lars Erik Malmberg
Author: James Hall ORCID iD

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