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Not just who you are, but who you were before: Social identification, identity incompatibility, and performance‐undermining learning behaviour in higher education

The current study builds on links between academic social identification and learning behaviours and extends these models by also considering the level of compatibility between the student identity and the pre‐existing self‐concept. This is a crucial extension, in the context of broadening access to...

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Published in:Journal of community & applied social psychology 2019-11, Vol.29 (6), p.474-491
Main Authors: Smyth, Lillian, Mavor, Kenneth I., Gray, Louie R.
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Language:English
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description The current study builds on links between academic social identification and learning behaviours and extends these models by also considering the level of compatibility between the student identity and the pre‐existing self‐concept. This is a crucial extension, in the context of broadening access to higher education and fostering belonging and learning in nontraditional students. Further, where previous work focused on learning behaviours that enhance performance (often learning approaches), we also consider performance‐undermining behaviours (self‐handicapping and procrastination). These effects are explored in survey responses from an undergraduate student sample (N = 121) from UK and broader European samples. Participants were predominantly female (69%) and native English speakers (87%). Three models of the relationships between these variables were tested using Mplus. Results indicate that performance‐undermining behaviours are predicted by identity incompatibility, but not identification level; deep learning approaches are predicted by identification level, but not identity incompatibility. This provides first evidence that identity incompatibility is not just a moderator of the identification‐learning relationships but, in fact, a separate identity process for consideration. We also present initial evidence for a mediation model, where in the identity variables are related to procrastination and self‐handicapping via learning approaches.
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); Wiley-Blackwell Read & Publish Collection; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Academic achievement
Behavior
Belonging
Cognitive style
College students
Higher education
Identification
identity compatibility
Job performance
Learning
Nontraditional students
Procrastination
Self concept
Selfhandicapping behaviour
self‐handicapping
Social identification
Social identity
Undergraduate students
title Not just who you are, but who you were before: Social identification, identity incompatibility, and performance‐undermining learning behaviour in higher education
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