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Academic performance, emotional intelligence, and academic burnout: A cross-sectional study of a mediational effect in nursing students

Course failure arises as the ultimate result of students' declining academic performance in the face of high course demands. It can eventually lead to dropout and academic dissatisfaction. Emotional intelligence may play an essential role in decreasing the emotional effects of stress, such as a...

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Published in:Nurse education today 2024-08, Vol.139, p.106221, Article 106221
Main Authors: Merino-Soto, César, Angulo-Ramos, Marisol, Llaja-Rojas, Victoria, Chans, Guillermo M.
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Angulo-Ramos, Marisol
Llaja-Rojas, Victoria
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description Course failure arises as the ultimate result of students' declining academic performance in the face of high course demands. It can eventually lead to dropout and academic dissatisfaction. Emotional intelligence may play an essential role in decreasing the emotional effects of stress, such as academic burnout in nursing students. However, emotional intelligence is conceptualized multidimensionally, and each of its attributes may have a different impact on burnout reduction. To explore the dimensions of emotional intelligence that may mediate the association between academic performance (course failure) and academic burnout in nursing students. The design was cross-sectional, with survey-based data collection. Educational setting, undergraduate nursing students at a private university in Metropolitan Lima, Peru. 154 students (77.3 % female) with a mean age of 25.9 years. A multiple mediation strategy was used, using the Wong-Law Emotional Intelligence Scale. Four emotional intelligence attributes (self-emotional appraisal, others' emotional appraisal, use of emotion, and regulation of emotion) were evaluated in the relationship of failed courses (dichotomous variable: yes/no) and academic burnout (single item based on physical and emotional exhaustion). The structural equation modeling framework was used. Course failure (academic performance) positively affects academic burnout. Regulation of emotion is the only dimension of emotional intelligence mediating between course failure and academic burnout. The proportion of the mediating effect was 0.315, while the rest was around zero. Statistically significant gender differences were detected concerning burnout, with men scoring moderately higher than women. The results indicate that the regulation of emotion may have a relevant role in reducing burnout compared to other emotional intelligence attributes. These regulatory skills are important for developing health care and positive patient relationships. Interventions focused on the regulatory characteristics of emotions and distinguishing different attributes of emotional intelligence while exploring its mediating effect should be strengthened. These implications are linked to the growing call to include EI in university education. •Self-emotional appraisal and emotional regulation are related to decreased burnout.•Men scored moderately higher than women concerning burnout.•Course failure (academic performance) positively affects academic burnout.•Emotional r
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subjects Academic burnout
Academic Performance - psychology
Academic Performance - statistics & numerical data
Adolescent
Adult
Burnout, Psychological - psychology
Course failure
Cross-Sectional Studies
Emotional Intelligence
Emotional Regulation
Female
Humans
Innovational education
Male
Mental health
Middle Aged
Nursing students
Professional education
Students, Nursing - psychology
Young Adult
title Academic performance, emotional intelligence, and academic burnout: A cross-sectional study of a mediational effect in nursing students
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