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To be or not to be: self-compassion and academic buoyancy in university

An H. Dang (Department of Educational Psychology, University of North Texas, Denton, Texas, USA)
Wendy Middlemiss (Department of Educational Psychology, University of North Texas, Denton, Texas, USA)

Journal of Applied Research in Higher Education

ISSN: 2050-7003

Article publication date: 21 October 2024

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Abstract

Purpose

Academic buoyancy refers to a student’s adaptive response to overcome common academic-related stress and challenges. Guided by social cognitive theory, we investigated the relation between students' academic buoyancy and their endorsement of compassionate and uncompassionate self-responding.

Design/methodology/approach

Students from a Minority-serving, Hispanic-serving public university (N = 112) completed an online survey assessing academic buoyancy (Martin and Marsh, 2008) and self-compassion (Neff, 2003). We conducted a hierarchical regression analysis with uncompassionate and compassionate self-responding as predictors and academic buoyancy as the outcome.

Findings

Compassionate self-responding (i.e. self-kindness, common humanity and mindfulness) explained additional variance above and beyond what uncompassionate self-responding (i.e. self-judgment, isolation and overidentification) explained in the model. Uncompassionate self-responding components emerged as the strongest predictors of academic buoyancy.

Originality/value

Limited research exists regarding the relation between self-compassion and academic buoyancy, especially in the higher education setting. This research indicates that student compassionate self-responding is associated with students’ adaptive response to overcoming academic setbacks, stress and challenges. The findings of the current research could have meaningful implications for university officials’ efforts in helping students overcome academic-related setbacks and achieve academic success in higher education. University offices, programs and communities can focus on compassionate self-responding to support students in overcoming common school-related setbacks. Programs could be developed to move students away from uncompassionate self-responding as a means of promoting buoyancy.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

We express our gratitude to the students who took part in this research and extend our appreciation to the University of North Texas faculty for their support in conducting this study.

Citation

Dang, A.H. and Middlemiss, W. (2024), "To be or not to be: self-compassion and academic buoyancy in university", Journal of Applied Research in Higher Education, Vol. ahead-of-print No. ahead-of-print. https://doi.org/10.1108/JARHE-02-2024-0069

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024, Emerald Publishing Limited

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