Using a Positive Psychology Lens to Understand How Veterinary Medicine Learning Contexts Promote Student Thriving and Inhibit Frustration.

IF 1.1 3区 农林科学 Q3 EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES
Lindley McDavid, Sandra F San Miguel
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Abstract

To develop a veterinary workforce equipped for long-term professional success, educational institutions must prioritize their students' well-being. Most approaches focus on building assets within the individual, like stress management, to limit negative outcomes, like burnout. Our research proposes a positive psychology-based model of student thriving that instead emphasizes the pervasive role of the social climate within a context. Basic Psychological Needs Theory (BPNT) posits that social relationships at the institutional, faculty and staff, and peer levels will promote student thriving and limit frustration through the satisfaction or frustration of the three psychological needs of competence, autonomy, and relatedness. Veterinary medical students across the United States (N = 202) completed a survey, and we used structural equation modeling to test how their institution's social climate predicted positive student outcomes (i.e., hope and life satisfaction) and a negative outcome (i.e., burnout) mediated by psychological need satisfaction and frustration. Students' perceptions of positive aspects of their institution's social climate ubiquitously predicted each variable in the model. Overall, the model positively predicted psychological need satisfaction (R2 = .44), hope (R2 = .67) and life satisfaction (R2 = .51), and negatively predicted psychological need frustration (R2 = .34) and burnout (R2 = .87). Findings emphasize the role veterinary medicine peers, faculty, and staff play in creating learning environments that support student thriving while limiting their frustration. By leveraging the interpersonal qualities posited by BPNT's parent theory, self-determination theory, veterinary medical colleges can build a culture of student support that benefits all within their system.

使用积极心理学视角了解兽医学学习环境如何促进学生茁壮成长并抑制挫败感。
为了培养一支具备长期职业成功能力的兽医队伍,教育机构必须优先考虑学生的身心健康。大多数方法侧重于在个人内部建立资产,如压力管理,以限制负面结果,如职业倦怠。我们的研究提出了一种基于积极心理学的学生茁壮成长模式,该模式强调社会氛围在环境中的普遍作用。基本心理需求理论(BPNT)认为,机构、教职员工和同伴层面的社会关系将通过满足或挫败能力、自主性和相关性这三种心理需求来促进学生的茁壮成长并限制挫折感。全美兽医专业学生(N = 202)完成了一项调查,我们使用结构方程模型来检验他们所在院校的社会氛围如何预测学生的积极结果(即希望和生活满意度)以及由心理需求满足和挫败感中介的消极结果(即职业倦怠)。学生对学校社会氛围积极方面的看法普遍预测了模型中的每个变量。总体而言,该模型对心理需求满足感(R2 = .44)、希望(R2 = .67)和生活满意度(R2 = .51)具有正向预测作用,对心理需求挫折感(R2 = .34)和职业倦怠(R2 = .87)具有负向预测作用。研究结果强调了兽医学同行、教职员工在创造学习环境,支持学生茁壮成长,同时限制他们的挫败感方面所发挥的作用。通过利用 BPNT 的母理论--自我决定理论所提出的人际品质,兽医学院可以建立一种学生支持文化,使其系统内的所有人都能从中受益。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
30.00%
发文量
113
审稿时长
>36 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Veterinary Medical Education (JVME) is the peer-reviewed scholarly journal of the Association of American Veterinary Medical Colleges (AAVMC). As an internationally distributed journal, JVME provides a forum for the exchange of ideas, research, and discoveries about veterinary medical education. This exchange benefits veterinary faculty, students, and the veterinary profession as a whole by preparing veterinarians to better perform their professional activities and to meet the needs of society. The journal’s areas of focus include best practices and educational methods in veterinary education; recruitment, training, and mentoring of students at all levels of education, including undergraduate, graduate, veterinary technology, and continuing education; clinical instruction and assessment; institutional policy; and other challenges and issues faced by veterinary educators domestically and internationally. Veterinary faculty of all countries are encouraged to participate as contributors, reviewers, and institutional representatives.
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