College Adjustment and Burnout Among Undergraduate Transfer and Native Students

by Psychology Roots
32 views
A+A-
Reset

College Adjustment and Burnout Among Undergraduate Transfer and Native Students

Here in this post, we are sharing the full Psychology thesis on “College Adjustment and Burnout Among Undergraduate Transfer and Native Students“. You can read the abstract of the thesis with a download link.  We have thousands of thesis in our collection (See articles). You can demand us any article related to psychology through our community, and we will provide you within a short time. Keep visiting Psychology Roots.

Abstract of the thesis

The present study explored group differences among native and transfer student groups on measures of adjustment and burnout. The study examined how specific variables impact transfer student adjustment and the predictive strength of previous hours earned and GPA on transfer student adjustment. The study also explored how emotional exhaustion is impacted by academic probation status and determined if a relationship exists between college adjustment and student burnout. Three-hundred sixty-five undergraduate students enrolled at a large southeastern public institution were administered The Student Adaptation to College Questionnaire (SACQ; Baker & Siryk, 1989) and the Maslach Burnout Inventory- Student Survey (MBI-SS; Schaufeli et al., 2002).

College Adjustment and Burnout Among Undergraduate Transfer and Native Students

College Adjustment and Burnout Among Undergraduate Transfer and Native Students

The results obtained in the present study suggest that when compared to native students, transfer students are experiencing more difficulty adjusting to the social and institutional demands of the university. The study also revealed that students on normal academic standing (i.e., not on academic probation) experienced elevated rates of emotional exhaustion which is considered to be the starting point for the burnout syndrome (Maslach et al., 1981; 1996). Finally, the study identified a significant relationship between adjustment and burnout. The findings suggest that better adjusted students may be less likely to experience symptoms of academic burnout. These results may be beneficial for college administrators, faculty and staff who work with undergraduate students and with transfer student populations. The results may have numerous implications for student advisement programs, college counseling centers, and for student orientation purposes.

Researcher of the Thesis 

  • ECKART WERTHER

Avail Thesis [sociallocker id=64051]

[/sociallocker]

Need help in Research:

Are you struggling in research? Don’t Worry, We provide you with complete guidance and support free and quickly. Just need to create a query in our community. We also offer paid services such as:

  • Thesis writing
  • Article writing
  • Statistical analysis
  • Reference according to APA
  • APA Formatting
  • Supervisions
  • Courses and Training

Contact us for the best quality free and paid services. info@psychologyroots.com or (+92-3336800644)

Information:

The purpose of our website is only to help students to assist them in finding the best suitable instrument for their research, especially in Pakistan where students waste a lot of time in search of the instruments. It is totally free of cost and only for creating awareness and assisting students and researchers for good research. Moreover, it is necessary for you to take the permission of scales from their representative authors before use because copyrights are reserved by the respected authors.

Help Us Improve This Article

Did you find an inaccuracy? We work hard to provide accurate and scientifically reliable information. If you have found an error of any kind, please let us know.

Add comment. we appropriate your effort.

Share with Us

If you have any scale or any material related to psychology kindly share it with us at psychologyroots@gmail.com. We help others on behalf of you.

Follow

Related Posts

Leave a Comment

Adblock Detected

Please support us by disabling your AdBlocker extension from your browsers for our website.