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Vicious and Virtuous Relationships between Procrastination and Emotions: An Investigation of the Reciprocal Relationship between Academic Procrastination and Learning-Related Anxiety and Hope

Authors :
Christopher K. Gadosey
Theresa Schnettler
Anne Scheunemann
Lisa Bäulke
Daniel O. Thies
Markus Dresel
Stefan Fries
Detlev Leutner
Joachim Wirth
Carola Grunschel
Source :
European Journal of Psychology of Education. 2024 39(3):2005-2031.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Although cross-sectional studies depict (negative) emotions as both antecedents and consequences of trait procrastination, longitudinal studies examining reciprocal relationships between procrastination and emotions are scant. Yet, investigating reciprocal relationships between procrastination and emotions within long-term frameworks can shed light on the mechanisms underlying these relationships. Additionally, the role of positive emotions concerning procrastination is largely unattended to in the procrastination-emotion research; albeit, this perspective can inform preventive and intervention measures against procrastination. In the present study, we explored reciprocal associations between trait academic procrastination on the one hand and trait-like learning-related anxiety and hope on the other hand over one semester. Overall, N = 789 students in German universities participated in a three-wave online panel study. Participants responded to questions on academic procrastination as well as learning-related anxiety and hope at the beginning (T1), middle (T2), and end (T3) of the lecture period of the semester in approximately 6-week measurement intervals. A latent cross-lagged panel model was used to test the hypotheses. After accounting for autoregressive effects, our results showed that academic procrastination at T1 positively predicted learning-related anxiety at T2. In contrast, academic procrastination at T1 negatively predicted learning-related hope at T2, which in turn negatively predicted academic procrastination at T3. Our results highlight positive emotions (e.g., hope) as also significant factors for procrastination and suggest them as possible "protective factors" against procrastination. Boosting positive emotions as part of interventions against procrastination could potentially help reduce the tendency to procrastinate.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0256-2928 and 1878-5174
Volume :
39
Issue :
3
Database :
ERIC
Journal :
European Journal of Psychology of Education
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
EJ1439232
Document Type :
Journal Articles<br />Reports - Research
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10212-023-00756-8