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Predicting University Adjustment from Coping-Styles, Self-Esteem, Self-Efficacy, and Personality: Findings from a Survey in a Sample of Italian Students

Giusy Danila Valenti, Palmira Faraci

2021European Journal of Investigation in Health Psychology and Education35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Starting university life requires that students learn to cope with several personal, academic, and social challenges. A wide array of variables affects how students adjust to university life. This study was aimed to investigate which factors among coping styles, self-esteem, self-efficacy, and personality traits (i.e., diligence, relational availability, mental flexibility, activity, and emotional stability) best predicted the levels of university adjustment in a sample of university freshmen (N = 204, 63% women). Data were collected using self-report instruments. Multiple regressions analyses were conducted to identify the most significant predictors of adjustment to college. Our findings reported that self-efficacy, task-, and emotion-oriented coping were the most significant predictors, together with relational availability and mental flexibility. These findings might improve the growing knowledge concerning university adjustment, supporting main previous research. The observed relationships between university adjustment and the measured variables suggest intriguing considerations about the importance for schools and universities of providing interventions for students that aim to develop and strengthen the investigated personality facets, reducing withdrawal, behavioral and/or mental disengagement, and promoting academic achievement and success.

Topics & Concepts

PsychologyDisengagement theoryPersonalityPsychological interventionCoping (psychology)Flexibility (engineering)Big Five personality traitsSelf-esteemClinical psychologySelf-efficacySocial psychologyDevelopmental psychologyApplied psychologyPsychiatryMathematicsStatisticsMedicineGerontologyHealthcare professionals’ stress and burnoutPerfectionism, Procrastination, Anxiety StudiesGrit, Self-Efficacy, and Motivation
Predicting University Adjustment from Coping-Styles, Self-Esteem, Self-Efficacy, and Personality: Findings from a Survey in a Sample of Italian Students | Litcius