Influence of Resilence, Everyday Stress, Self-Efficacy, Self-Esteem, Emotional Intelligence, and Empathy on Attitudes toward Sexual and Gender Diversity Rights
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Mdpi
Materia
Attitudes toward sexual orientation and gender identity rights University Students Resilience Everyday stress Emotional intelligence Burnout Empathy
Date
2020-08-27Referencia bibliográfica
Morales Rodríguez, F.M.; Rodríguez Clares, R.; García Muñoz, M.R. Influence of Resilience, Everyday Stress, Self-Efficacy, Self-Esteem, Emotional Intelligence, and Empathy on Attitudes toward Sexual and Gender Diversity Rights. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 6219. [https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17176219]
Sponsorship
UNESCOAbstract
The present study forms part of the project “Cross-disciplinary education for sexual,
body, and gender diversity” (Code 419). The aim of this study was to analyze the role played by
the psychoeducational variables involved in burnout (resilience, self-e cacy, self-esteem, emotional
intelligence, empathy, and everyday stress) on attitudes toward sexual and gender diversity
rights. Participants comprised 170 university students undertaking a degree in primary education.
Instruments were administered to assess the constructs analyzed, ensuring informed consent,
voluntary participation, anonymity, and data confidentiality. An ex post facto design was employed to
determine whether attitudes toward sexual and gender diversity rights are influenced by the possible
relationships and role of these variables. We found statistically significant associations between
students’ attitudes toward sexual and gender diversity at all three levels (sociocultural, relational,
and personal) and the variable of burnout. Attitudes towards gender sexual orientation and
gender identity rights influence burnout, and vice versa. As we ponder deeply about how these
factors influence one another, we can shift our perspectives in a way that builds social harmony.
It is important to learn how exactly these influences work, and this knowledge translates into
making teaching strategies more e ective to help raise awareness about guaranteeing rights for all.
At the personal level of students’ attitudes toward sexual and gender diversity/equality, we found
positive correlations between this level and the total score for the variable of resilience and with
its factor of personal competence. The data obtained will be of use for future psychoeducational
assessment and intervention programs related to an education in sexual orientation and gender identity
rights that are aimed at developing socio-emotional competencies and attention to diversity with
the ultimate goal of improving social harmony by dismantling stereotypes and raising awareness of
the importance of the variables of resilience, self-e cacy, self-esteem, emotional intelligence, empathy,
and everyday stress which highlights how “education is an instrument of social transformation