Relación entre el tecnoestrés y objetivos académicos en universitarios peruanos
Since 2020, educational digitalization has highlighted the impact of technostress on the academic goal orientation of Peruvian university students. This phenomenon affects their motivation, engagement, and ability to face educational challenges, emphasizing the importance of analyzing this relationship within the context of increasing digitalization. The study aimed to evaluate the relationship between technostress and academic goal orientation among Peruvian students, considering how technological demands and interpersonal relationships influence their performance. Additionally, it sought to identify strategies to mitigate the negative effects of technostress. A quantitative correlational study was conducted with 885 students using the Technostress Scale (TS4US) and the Academic Goals Orientation Questionnaire (AGOQ). Data were analyzed through statistical methods, including network analysis and a regression model. A significant negative correlation (r = -0.32) was found between technostress and academic goal orientation. Technological demands and dysfunctional interpersonal relationships impacted goals related to learning and personal growth. The regression model explained 12.5% of the variability in goal orientation, highlighting the negative effects of technological skills-demands (B = -0.228) and interpersonal relationships (B = -0.173). It is essential to implement institutional strategies such as psychological support, digital training, and regulation of technology use to create healthy educational environments that enhance academic performance and strengthen orientation toward meaningful goals.
- Research Article
12
- 10.4103/1357-6283.120701
- Jan 1, 2013
- Education for Health
According to goal orientation theory, achievement goals are defined as the terminal point towards which one's efforts are directed. The four academic achievement goal orientations commonly recognised are mastery, performance approach, performance avoidance and work avoidance. The objective of this study was to understand the goal orientation of second year undergraduate medical students and how this correlates with their academic performance. The study population consisted of 244 second year Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery (MBBS) students of Melaka Manipal Medical College, Manipal campus, Manipal University, India. Students were categorised as high performers and low performers based on their first year university examination marks. Their goal orientations were assessed through a validated questionnaire developed by Was et al. These components were analysed by independent sample t-test and correlated to their first year university examination marks. Confirmatory component factor analysis extracted four factors, which accounted for 40.8% of the total variance in goal orientation. The performance approach goal orientation alone explained 16.7% of the variance followed by mastery (10.8%), performance avoidance (7.7%) and work avoidance (5.7%). The Cronbach's alpha for 19 items, which contributed to internal consistency of the tool, was observed to be 0.635. A strong positive correlation was shown between performance approach, performance avoidance and work avoidance orientations. Of the four goal orientations, only the mean scores in work avoidance orientation differed for low performers and high performers (5.0 vs. 4.3; P = 0.0003). Work avoidance type of goal orientation among the low performer group may account for their lower performance compared with high performer group. This indicates that academic achievement goal orientation may play a role in the performance of undergraduate medical students.
- Research Article
- 10.36358/jce.2024.24.4.79
- Dec 31, 2024
- Korean Society for Creativity Education
This study aimed to examine the relationships between academic achievement goal orientation, science self-concept, and academic engagement of students who entered a science high school through the social integration admission process. Specifically, this study investigated whether there were differences in students' science self-concept and academic engagement before and after their entry into the science high school. Furthermore, the study explored how their achievement goal orientation influenced their science self-concept and academic engagement. For this purpose, 60 students(45 male and 15 female) who entered the science high school through the social integration process participated in the study, and academic achievement goal orientation, science self-concept, and academic engagement were measured using self-report questionnaires. The results showed that there was no significant difference in science self-concept before and after entering the science high school, however, academic engagement significantly decreased. Among the types of academic achievement goal orientation (performance-avoidance, performance-approach, mastery-approach), only performance-avoidance goal orientation had a significantly negative impact on science self-concept, while it did not affect academic engagement. Based on these findings, the study suggests specific educational strategies to prevent school maladjustment and support school adjustment for students entering science high schools through the social integration admission process.
- Research Article
- 10.18502/qjcr.v23i90.16073
- Jul 17, 2024
- Journal of Counseling Research
Aim: The present study was conducted with the aim of determining the effectiveness of future perspective education on goal orientation and academic hope in 11th grade male students of Baghmalek city (Iran). Methods: The current experimental research design included a pre-test and post-test experiment with a control group. The population of this research included all 11th grade male students in Baghmalek city in the academic year of 1400-1401 (persian calendar). Among these individuals, 48 persons who met the criteria for entering the research were selected through multi-stage random sampling method and were placed in two experimental (n=24) and control (n=24) groups. In this research, Goal Orientation Questionnaire and Education Hope Questionnaire were used. After the pre-test, the experimental group received the educational perspective of the future vision during nine 60 to 90 minutes sessions. Then a post-test was taken from both groups. Findings: The results of multivariate and univariate covariance analysis showed that future perspective education had a significant effect on the dimensions of goal orientation (dominant, dominant-avoidant, performance-oriented and performance-avoidant) and academic hope in 11th grade male students (p > 0.005). Conclusion: In general, the results of this research showed that teaching the future perspective is effective on goal orientation and educational hope and can be used to improve the academic hope and goal orientation of 11th grade male students.
- Research Article
9
- 10.1177/1932202x16685307
- Jan 3, 2017
- Journal of Advanced Academics
The relations of academic and social goal orientations to academic and social behaviors and self-concept were investigated among academically talented adolescents ( N = 1,218) attending a mastery-oriented academic residential summer program. Results supported context effects in that academic mastery goal orientations predicted academic (in-class engagement, scholastic self-concept) and general outcomes (global self-worth self-concept) more than any other goal orientation. There were also gender differences such that academic mastery goal orientations predicted course performance and responsible classroom behavior only for girls, whereas for boys, academic mastery goal orientations were positively related to close friendship self-concept. The relation of social goal orientations to social outcomes also varied by gender. For instance, social development goal orientations were uniquely associated with social self-concept for girls, whereas there were some unique patterns regarding social demonstration-avoidance goal orientations for boys. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed.
- Research Article
5
- 10.32674/jis.v9i4.752
- Nov 15, 2019
- Journal of International Students
This study explores academic stressors and achievement goal orientations of college students, and the relationship between these variables using academic stressors as predictors. As the number of English as a Second Language (ESL) international students has increased rapidly in the US, students’ status (American or ESL international) was also examined. A total of 715 students participated in the study from two universities in the US. Results show that ESL international and American students have different achievement goal orientations and academic stressors. Additionally, student status and academic stressors predict college students’ various goal orientations. The implications provide useful suggestions to higher education professionals in order to better understand and assist diverse students to succeed in academia.
- Research Article
3
- 10.2466/pr0.2000.87.2.373
- Oct 1, 2000
- Psychological Reports
This study examined relationships between distal social contexts, parents' support for learning, self-concept, and adolescents' academic goal orientations. Data were collected from 435 female and 410 male 18-yr.-old South Africans. Multistage regression analyses indicated that family social status and rural/urban locality had unmediated relations with the adolescents' learning and performance goal orientations. In addition, parent and self-concept measures combined to have small independent associations with the adolescents' academic goal orientations.
- Research Article
13
- 10.1007/s10484-015-9287-8
- May 9, 2015
- Applied Psychophysiology and Biofeedback
The present study investigated whether students' academic goal orientation (learning goals, performance goals, work avoidance) and their individual competence beliefs (their academic self-concept) can predict motivation-related cardiovascular activation patterns in a demanding performance situation. A sample of seventy-two undergraduate students rated their academic goal orientation as well as their competence beliefs and completed a mental arithmetic task. Heart rate (HR), blood pressure, pre-ejection period (PEP) as well as cardiac output (CO) and total peripheral resistance were monitored continuously during rest and task exposure. Students scoring higher on work avoidance showed smaller increases in HR and CO, and a smaller shortening of the PEP. A lower academic self-concept was associated with attenuated CO reactivity and a smaller shortening of the PEP. Learning and performance goals were unrelated to cardiovascular activity. The attenuated cardiac activity observed for work avoidance and competence beliefs was interpreted in terms of reduced task engagement resulting from lower success importance.
- Research Article
- 10.56293/ijmsssr.2025.5408
- Jan 1, 2025
- International Journal of Management Studies and Social Science Research
This study aimed to determine which domain of learning environment best influences academic achievement goal orientation of the students. This study utilized the non-experimental quantitative research design using descriptive technique involving teachers in one District of Davao Occidental Division, Philippines. The study was conducted on the second semester of school year 2021-2022. Research instruments on learning environment best influences academic achievement goal orientation of the students were used as source of data. Using mean, pearson-r, and regression as statistical tools to treat the data, the study showed the following results: the level of learning environment is very high, the level of academic achievement goal orientation of the students is very high, there is a significance on the relationship between learning environment and academic achievement goal orientation of the students, the domains of learning environment best influence academic achievement goal orientation of the students are Teaching for Understanding and Support Learning for Understandin
- Research Article
12
- 10.3389/fpsyg.2022.933334
- Feb 2, 2023
- Frontiers in Psychology
One of the most significant current discussions in educational psychology is academic passion. This research aimed to investigate the mediating role of academic passion in the relationship between goal orientation and academic self-regulation with students' academic burnout. However, so far, there has been little discussion about these variables together. The statistical population of the present study includes all undergraduate English students of Islamic Azad University, Tabriz, whose strength is equal to 598 people, and the sample size is determined by the convenience sampling method and Cochran's formula (248 participants). Data collection methods in this study include four questionnaires of the academic passion; goal orientation; self-regulatory and academic burnout. The Pearson test results showed that the correlation coefficient of academic burnout with goal orientation, self-regulatory, and academic passion is statistically significant at 0.05%. These variables are inconsistent with academic burnout, and with increase in these variables, academic burnout significantly decreases. The correlation coefficient of goal orientation with self-regulatory variables and academic passion is statistically significant at the level of 0.05%. These variables are consistent with goal orientation, self-regulated learning, and academic passion, and with increase in the aforementioned variables, they significantly rise. Goal-oriented and self-regulated goal orientation can predict academic passion. Academic passion has a direct and significant relationship with academic self-regulation and goal orientation. Finally, the obtained fit indices of the general model have the desired fit with the collected data. The implication is that academic passion plays an important role in creating a positive learning environment that will lead to effective learning and teaching. It may influence student learning. Passion inspires and stimulates, and teaching with passion promotes learning.
- Research Article
- 10.1177/21582440251342522
- Jan 1, 2025
- SAGE Open
The subjective wellbeing of students is a key aspect of their personal and academic development, especially during adolescence, a period in which numerous variables that shape personality and academic performance converge. This study aims to analyse the relationship between empathy and subjective happiness and the possible mediating role of goal orientations (achievement and ego) in secondary school students. The study comprised 1,664 participants from eight secondary schools. The instruments used were the Basic Empathy Scale (BES), the Perception of Success Questionnaire (POSQ), and the Subjective Happiness Scale (SHS), validated and adapted for the teenage population. The results revealed differences by gender in task orientation and a significant correlation between empathy, task orientation and subjective happiness, as well as the positive mediating role of task orientation between empathy and subjective happiness, in line with adaptive behaviours; ego orientation was, in contrast, negatively correlated with empathy and subjective happiness. Academic goal orientation (task and ego) in teenage students plays a central role in the promotion of adaptive behaviours, empathy and subjective wellbeing, which are key factors in their personal and academic development.
- Research Article
3
- 10.1080/11356405.2017.1377992
- Oct 2, 2017
- Cultura y Educación
This study explored how ethnic membership relates to children’s academic achievement and goal orientations and whether there are ethnic differences in how goal orientations are linked to academic achievement. Further, we investigated whether these relations vary based on the geographical region where ethnic groups live. The sample included 361 children (179 girls), age 12–15 years, from two regions in Romania, Banat (n = 237) and Moldavia (n = 124). Ethnic differences in academic achievement were found only between majority and Hungarian minority ethnic groups who live in different areas, whereas ethnic differences in goal orientations were found between minority and both groups of majority children (living in the same and in different geographical regions). The strengths of the associations between goals and academic achievement were not significantly different based on ethnic and regional background. The findings highlight the importance of cultural (i.e., ethnicity) and contextual (i.e., regional area) factors in relation to children’s achievement and motivation (i.e., goal orientations). Additionally, our findings show that the relations between academic achievement and goal orientations are similar across the analysed ethnic and regional groups.
- Research Article
20
- 10.3390/ijerph17217887
- Oct 28, 2020
- International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
Subjective wellbeing is a current issue today. Various variables affect subjective wellbeing during adolescence: a crucial stage in the life of the individual. This study focuses on analysing the relationship between academic goal orientation, optimism and life satisfaction in adolescent students, as well as the possible mediating role of the goal orientation (task and ego) in the relationship between optimism and life satisfaction in adolescents. Methods: The sample comprises 1602 students (male N = 871; 54.36% and female N = 731; 45.63%) from nine secondary schools. The instruments used were the Life Orientation Test Revised (LOT-R), the Perception of Success Questionnaire (POSQ) and the Satisfaction With Life Scale (SWLS) questionnaire. Results: The results of the study reveal significant correlations between optimism-related variables, goal orientation and life satisfaction. In addition, goal orientation was found to have a positive mediating role on optimism and life satisfaction. Conclusion: The study shows the importance of promoting adaptive behaviours in goal orientation in adolescents, leading to optimal levels on variables such as optimism and life satisfaction, which in turn improve the individual’s psychological development and academic performance.
- Research Article
9
- 10.1088/1742-6596/1175/1/012132
- Mar 1, 2019
- Journal of Physics: Conference Series
This study was aimed to examine the interplay of academic efficacy, goal orientation toward academic achievement. 199 first and second year university students in Indonesia were selected as respondents. The Pattern of Adaptive Learning Scales (PALS) was used to measure the academic efficacy and goal orientation. The finding revealed that mastery goal orientation is a considerable factor for academic achievement. This finding can be used in the context of improving educational quality achievement in Indonesia.
- Research Article
3
- 10.1111/inm.13313
- Feb 27, 2024
- International journal of mental health nursing
To investigate the association between the mental health of nursing students, the stress of higher education, and academic goal orientation. At a medical college, 1170 nursing students volunteered for this cross-sectional survey. The Warwick-Edinburgh Well-being Scale, the Higher Education Stress Scale, and the Academic Goal Orientation Questionnaire were utilised to collect data. Descriptive statistics, ANOVA, and Pearson correlation analysis were all performed to evaluate the data. The significance level for all statistical tests was p < 0.05. A total of 1126 valid samples, with a 96.23% effective recovery rate. The Higher Education Stress Scale score for nursing students was (38.31 ± 8.29), the Academic Goal Orientation Questionnaire result was (49.32 ± 9.62), and the Mental Health Scale value was (31.24 ± 14.00). Overall, there was a strong relationship between the stress associated with higher education, academic goal orientation, and the mental health of nursing students. Therefore, in future interventions, the Chinese government and its relevant educational authorities can enhance nursing students' ability to reasonably regulate stress related to higher education and set clear academic goals by adjusting the strategies for regulating nursing students' academic stress and increasing the number of academic goal-oriented courses to improve their mental health.
- Research Article
1
- 10.1080/07448481.2024.2351409
- May 9, 2024
- Journal of American College Health
Objective: Imposterism and academic self-handicapping (ASH) are related to negative outcomes in college students. We examined whether the relationship between imposterism and academic goal orientations is mediated by ASH across men and women and for students who are underrepresented on campus. Participants: Participants were 852 undergraduates (29.1% men, 26.1% first-generation, and 22.1% from underrepresented racial/ethnic groups at the predominantly white institution (PWI) where data was gathered). Methods: Participants completed self-report scales assessing imposterism, ASH, and academic goal orientation. Results: ASH partially mediated the relationship of imposterism to mastery and performance approach academic goal orientations. High imposterism was directly related to high performance-avoidance orientation. Our model was invariant to gender; while it did not appear to be invariant to underrepresented status, this was accounted for by first-generation student status. Conclusions: Results have implications for the classroom and creation of interventions to minimize ASH and imposterism and their impact on student success.
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