Too Anxious to Talk: Social Anxiety, Academic Communication, and Students’ Experiences in Higher Education

Social anxiety is related to a host of negative student outcomes in the educational context, including physical symptoms of anxiety, reduced cognitive functioning, and poor academic performance. Despite the prevalence of social anxiety, little is known about mechanisms that may underlie associations...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of emotional and behavioral disorders 2022-12, Vol.30 (4), p.273-286
Hauptverfasser: Archbell, Kristen A., Coplan, Robert J.
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container_title Journal of emotional and behavioral disorders
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creator Archbell, Kristen A.
Coplan, Robert J.
description Social anxiety is related to a host of negative student outcomes in the educational context, including physical symptoms of anxiety, reduced cognitive functioning, and poor academic performance. Despite the prevalence of social anxiety, little is known about mechanisms that may underlie associations between social anxiety and outcomes in the context of higher education. Therefore, the goal of this study was to evaluate a conceptual model linking social anxiety, communication with peers and instructors, students’ experiences (i.e., engagement, connectedness, and satisfaction), and indices of socio-emotional functioning at university. Participants were 1,073 undergraduate students (Mage = 20.3 years, SD = 3.49) who completed a series of self-report measures. Among the results, social anxiety was negatively related to communication with instructors, socio-emotional functioning, and student experiences, and academic communication accounted for significant variance in the links between social anxiety and student experiences. In addition, there was at least some evidence that student experiences partially mediated the association between social anxiety and socio-emotional functioning. Gender effects suggest that social anxiety is related to less communication with instructors, lower engagement and satisfaction, and poorer socio-emotional functioning among females compared with males. Results are situated within current literature examining social anxiety in education. The discussion provides concrete suggestions for educational practitioners to increase support for students who experience social anxiety.
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subjects Academic achievement
Anxiety
Cognitive functioning
College students
Communication
Conceptual models
Emotional well being
Emotions
Foreign Countries
Higher education
Interpersonal Communication
Learner Engagement
Males
Men
Outcomes of Education
Physical symptoms
Self report
Social anxiety
Social Emotional Learning
Student Experience
Student Needs
Student Participation
Students
Teachers
Undergraduate Students
title Too Anxious to Talk: Social Anxiety, Academic Communication, and Students’ Experiences in Higher Education
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