Publication | Closed Access
Optimism and Attributional Retraining: Longitudinal Effects on Academic Achievement, Test Anxiety, and Voluntary Course Withdrawal in College Students<sup>1</sup>
144
Citations
39
References
2004
Year
Self-efficacy TheoryStudent MotivationDance MediaAr Cognitive InterventionEducational PsychologyMotivationStudent SuccessEducationLongitudinal EffectsEducational TestingMental HealthStudent OutcomeCumulative Academic AchievementHigher EducationPsychologyAcademic AchievementAttributional Retraining
A longitudinal study examined how optimism and attributional retraining (AR) influenced 256 first‐year college students' test anxiety, cumulative academic achievement, and course persistence in college over an academic year. Students' optimism was assessed at the start of the academic year and they were assigned to either an AR or no‐AR (control) condition. Measures of students' test anxiety, cumulative grade point average, and voluntary course withdrawal were obtained at the end of the academic year. Results suggest that although high optimism was an academic risk factor among students who did not receive AR, high‐optimism students who did receive the AR cognitive intervention benefited from its effects to a greater extent than did low‐optimism students.
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