Social support resilience as a protective mental health factor in postgraduate researchers’ experiences: a longitudinal analysis

IF 1.8 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
P. Gooding, R. Crook, M. Westwood, Claire Faichnie, Sarah Peters
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Abstract

Purpose This study aims to examine the following across a six-month period in post-graduate research (PGR) students: mental health and well-being; the effect of academic pressures on depression, anxiety and well-being; and the extent to which psychological resilience buffered against academic pressures. Design/methodology/approach This was a longitudinal questionnaire study with predictor variables of six types of academic pressure, outcome variables of depression, anxiety and well-being, and a moderator of resilience. Findings Well-being significantly worsened across the six-month timeframe, but levels of depression and anxiety remained relatively stable. Negative perceptions of academic challenges at baseline significantly predicted anxiety, but not depression or well-being, six months later. Negative appraisals of relationships with supervisors, other university staff and work peers were not predictors of anxiety. Social support resilience which was present at baseline buffered the relationship between perceived academic challenges and anxiety. Practical implications Higher education institutions have a duty of care towards PGR students, many of whom struggle with the escalating interactions between mental health problems and academic pressures. Actively nurturing psychological resilience related to social support is key at the level of individual students and the PGR community but more broadly at an institutional level. Originality/value To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this is the first study to examine the effects of negative perceptions of multiple facets of academic life on depression, anxiety and well-being longitudinally. Additionally, it is the first study to investigate, and demonstrate, the extent to which psychological resilience can lessen the relationship between academic challenges and anxiety over time.
社会支持弹性对研究生科研人员心理健康的影响:一项纵向分析
目的本研究旨在调查六个月的研究生研究(PGR)学生的以下方面:心理健康和幸福感;学业压力对抑郁、焦虑和幸福感的影响;以及心理弹性在多大程度上缓冲了学业压力。设计/方法/方法这是一项纵向问卷研究,包括六种学业压力的预测变量,抑郁、焦虑和幸福感的结果变量,以及心理弹性的调节变量。在六个月的时间框架内,幸福感明显恶化,但抑郁和焦虑的水平保持相对稳定。6个月后,对学业挑战的负面认知显著预示着焦虑,而不是抑郁或幸福感。对与导师、其他大学工作人员和同事关系的负面评价并不是焦虑的预测因素。社会支持弹性在基线时存在,缓冲了学业挑战感知与焦虑之间的关系。高等教育机构有责任照顾PGR学生,他们中的许多人都在心理健康问题和学业压力之间不断升级的相互作用中挣扎。积极培养与社会支持相关的心理弹性在学生个人和PGR社区层面上是关键,但在更广泛的机构层面上是关键。原创性/价值据作者所知,这是第一个对学术生活的多个方面的负面看法对抑郁、焦虑和幸福感的纵向影响进行研究的研究。此外,这是第一个调查和证明心理弹性在多大程度上可以减轻学业挑战和焦虑之间的关系的研究。
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来源期刊
Studies in Graduate and Postdoctoral Education
Studies in Graduate and Postdoctoral Education EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
9.10%
发文量
17
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