Influence of Self-Efficacy, Anxiety and Psychological Well-Being on Academic Engagement During University Education
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Lizarte Simón, Emilio Jesús; Gijón Puerta, José; Galván Malagón, María Carmen; Khaled Gijón, MeriemEditorial
MDPI
Materia
self-efficacy academic engagement anxiety
Fecha
2024-12-13Referencia bibliográfica
Lizarte Simón, E.J. et. al. Educ. Sci. 2024, 14, 1367. [https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci14121367]
Patrocinador
Outreach and Heritage and Faculty of Education, University of Granada; The 2020 Programme of Activities of Outreach; Project: Stress-Less: “Take My Paws”; Fostering Student Wellness with a Therapy Dog Program at the Faculty Library; Laboratory for Cognition, Health, Training and Interaction among Humans, Animals and Machines (SEJ-658) of the University of Granada (Spain)Resumen
For many students, the start of a university course is a positive experience, as it is a
challenge that involves academic commitment and the achievement of a university degree. However,
for other students, access to university becomes a stressful experience that manifests itself in signs
of anxiety. Previous studies have shown the influence of high levels of anxiety on the degree of
academic engagement for good study performance, with positive or negative moderators such as
psychological well-being or self-efficacy. The overall aim of this study is to analyse self-efficacy
and psychological well-being as moderators between anxiety and academic engagement, as well as
the relationships between the variables. In the present study, 751 first-year students of the Faculty
of Education Sciences of the University of Granada (Spain), of whom 90.7% are women and 9.3%
are men, all aged between 18 and 47 years old (M = 21.05, SD = 3.57), completed the UtrechtWork
Engagement Scale-Student questionnaires (UWES-S), Maslach Burnout Inventory-Student Survey
(MBI-SS), State–Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI) and Psychological Well-being Scale. The correlations
between scales were studied using Pearson’s correlation coefficient. To assess the moderating effect
of self-efficacy and psychological well-being on the relationship between anxiety and academic
engagement, structural equations were used with the maximum likelihood method. In relation to the
analysis carried out, the findings show the importance of self-efficacy and psychological well-being
as moderators between anxiety and academic engagement. Self-efficacy showed a moderating effect
on the relationship between anxiety and academic engagement, so the interaction between anxiety
and self-efficacy meant that in situations of high anxiety and high efficacy, academic engagement was
virtually unaffected.





