Beneficial Academic Orientations and Self-Actualization of College Students

This study tested the prediction that individual differences in self-actualization would be associated with six academic orientations which influence college students' adjustment to their studies. Volunteer undergraduates, solicited from courses in the sciences and liberal arts and invited to c...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychological reports 2007-04, Vol.100 (2), p.604-612
Hauptverfasser: Davidson, William B., Bromfield, Jeffrey M., Beck, Hall P.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This study tested the prediction that individual differences in self-actualization would be associated with six academic orientations which influence college students' adjustment to their studies. Volunteer undergraduates, solicited from courses in the sciences and liberal arts and invited to complete internet measures of the academic orientations and self-actualization were 137 men and 311 women (M age = 21.1, SD = 4.8). Statistically significant bivariate correlations obtained between scores on self-actualization with all six orientations: creative expression, reading for pleasure, academic efficacy, and, inversely, structure dependence, academic apathy, and mistrust of instructors. Regression analysis showed that four orientations were independently related to self-actualization scores. The role of these four orientations in actualizing students' adjustment was discussed, and implications were drawn about the interpretation of scores on the four orientations.
ISSN:0033-2941
1558-691X
DOI:10.2466/pr0.100.2.604-612