Challenge-obstacle stressors and cyberloafing among higher vocational education students: the moderating role of smartphone addiction and Maladaptive
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Lizarte Simón, Emilio Jesús; Khaled Gijón, Meriem; Galván Malagón, María Carmen; Gijón Puerta, JoséEditorial
Frontiers Media
Materia
Cyberloafing Challenge Hindrance
Fecha
2024-04-18Referencia bibliográfica
Lizarte Simón EJ, Khaled Gijón M, Galván Malagón MC and Gijón Puerta J (2024) Challenge-obstacle stressors and cyberloafing among higher vocational education students: the moderating role of smartphone addiction and Maladaptive. Front. Psychol. 15:1358634. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1358634
Patrocinador
Project Design of an instrument for the detection of the risk of early dropout in students of Higher Vocational Training, PPJIA2020.14, funded by the University of GranadaResumen
The start of higher vocational education and training is a new stage for students
with a challenge between theoretical classes and the new expectations and
demands of companies during the internship period. To understand some of
the implications of stress on cyberloafing, we can distinguish between stress
perceived as an obstacle that can be overcome – challenge stress – or as a
threat that can block work performance – obstacle stress – and stress perceived
as an obstacle that can be overcome – challenge stress – or as a threat that
can block work performance – obstacle stress-. The aim of this research is to
find out the relationships between challenge-obstacle stress in Cyberloafing,
as well as the moderating effect of Smartphone Addiction and Maladaptive. In
this study, the Challenge-Hindrance Stressors, Smartphone addiction scaleshort
version (SAS-SV) instrument, the Maladaptive subscale of the Cognitive
Emotional Regulation Questionnaire (CERQ) and Cyberloafing were applied to
403 upper-level vocational training students from different secondary schools
in all provinces of the autonomous community of Andalusia, Spain, distributed
throughout the provinces that make up this autonomous community. The
findings show that students’ challenge stressors do not increase Cyberloafing,
enabling them to cope with the academic demands and work challenges during
the theory and internship period. On the contrary, obstacle stressors generate
stressful situations that undermine the acquisition of objectives and development
of academic competences. In our research we observe that challenge-obstacle
stressors have a disparate influence on cyberloafing. Challenge stressors are
negatively related to Maladaptive. The same is not true for obstacle stressors.