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Exploring the relationship between self-perceived academic performance and entrepreneurial intention: the moderating roles of serious leisure, perceived stress, and gender

Exploring the relationship between self-perceived academic performance and entrepreneurial intention: the moderating roles of serious leisure, perceived stress, and gender
Exploring the relationship between self-perceived academic performance and entrepreneurial intention: the moderating roles of serious leisure, perceived stress, and gender
Purpose: drawing on a framework of conservation of resources theory, the purpose of this paper is to explore the relationship between self-perceived academic performance and individual entrepreneurial intention, and consider the potential moderating role of (a) participation in serious leisure, (b) perceived stress, and/or (c) gender.

Design/methodology/approach: 405 UK-based undergraduates completed the questionnaire, with a representative gender split of 57% women and 43% men.
Findings: The positive relationship between self-perceived academic performance and individual entrepreneurial intention was moderated by serious leisure (stronger when participation in serious leisure increased) and by perceived stress (stronger when levels of perceived stress were lower). However, contrary to our expectations, gender had no statistically significant moderating role.

Originality: the theoretical contribution comes from advancing conservation of resources theory, specifically the interaction of personal resources, resource caravans, and resource passageways.

Practical implications: the practical contribution comes from informing policy for universities and national governments to increase individual entrepreneurial intention in undergraduates.
2042-3896
Mouratidou, Maria
39c0b9f4-d513-485b-bc03-fc70c6c97cf0
Donald, William E.
0b3cb4ca-8ed9-4a5f-9c10-359923469eec
Nimmi, Pa M.
af0dc088-2f06-4d66-89c9-7fd5fc4ebca5
Ma, Yin
e1742de2-49eb-4ede-8523-b6ad54f46f51
Mouratidou, Maria
39c0b9f4-d513-485b-bc03-fc70c6c97cf0
Donald, William E.
0b3cb4ca-8ed9-4a5f-9c10-359923469eec
Nimmi, Pa M.
af0dc088-2f06-4d66-89c9-7fd5fc4ebca5
Ma, Yin
e1742de2-49eb-4ede-8523-b6ad54f46f51

Mouratidou, Maria, Donald, William E., Nimmi, Pa M. and Ma, Yin (2024) Exploring the relationship between self-perceived academic performance and entrepreneurial intention: the moderating roles of serious leisure, perceived stress, and gender. Higher Education Skills and Work Based Learning. (In Press)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Purpose: drawing on a framework of conservation of resources theory, the purpose of this paper is to explore the relationship between self-perceived academic performance and individual entrepreneurial intention, and consider the potential moderating role of (a) participation in serious leisure, (b) perceived stress, and/or (c) gender.

Design/methodology/approach: 405 UK-based undergraduates completed the questionnaire, with a representative gender split of 57% women and 43% men.
Findings: The positive relationship between self-perceived academic performance and individual entrepreneurial intention was moderated by serious leisure (stronger when participation in serious leisure increased) and by perceived stress (stronger when levels of perceived stress were lower). However, contrary to our expectations, gender had no statistically significant moderating role.

Originality: the theoretical contribution comes from advancing conservation of resources theory, specifically the interaction of personal resources, resource caravans, and resource passageways.

Practical implications: the practical contribution comes from informing policy for universities and national governments to increase individual entrepreneurial intention in undergraduates.

Text
Mouratidou et al. (2024) AAM - Accepted Manuscript
Restricted to Repository staff only until 31 May 2024.
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 26 March 2024

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 488672
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/488672
ISSN: 2042-3896
PURE UUID: 7657db9c-75d5-4b76-bd36-ae695b775e35
ORCID for William E. Donald: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3670-5374

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 04 Apr 2024 16:35
Last modified: 10 Apr 2024 02:14

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Contributors

Author: Maria Mouratidou
Author: William E. Donald ORCID iD
Author: Pa M. Nimmi
Author: Yin Ma

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