Education & Training, Psychology

Student personality and academic achievement: mediating role of psychological capital (PsyCap)

Student personality and academic achievement: mediating role of psychological capital (PsyCap)

The findings suggest that the curriculum in higher education institutions should include interventions on building the psychological capital of the students as it positively correlates to the academic achievement.

Authors

Ranjeet Nambudiri, Indian Institute of Management Indore, Indore, India)

Rihana Shaik, Associate Professor, Jindal Global Business School, O.P. Jindal Global University, Sonipat, Haryana, India.

Swati Ghulyani, Department of Management and Organizations, Amrut Mody School of Management, Ahmedabad University, Ahmedabad, India.

Summary

The purpose of this paper is to investigate the role of a second-order state-like construct “psychological capital” (or PsyCap) as an underlying mechanism explaining the personality–academic achievement (AA) relationship in the educational context.

Methodology

The conceptual model was statistically tested on a sample of 305 post-graduate students at a premier business school in central India using standard measures of personality and PsyCap. AA was measured through cumulative grade point average obtained from the administrative office. Data were collected through multiple sources to minimize common method variance. Analysis was done using macro PROCESS and validated using PLS–SEM.

Findings

Results indicated that PsyCap positively influenced AA. Furthermore, PsyCap mediated the relationship between openness to experience, extraversion, agreeableness dimensions of student personality and AA.

Research Implications

Longitudinal research designs with interventions to enhance PsyCap of students may strengthen the findings of this study.

Practical Implications

The findings suggest that the curriculum in higher education institutions should include interventions on building the PsyCap of the students as it positively correlates to the AA. Academic administrators may not have control on students’ dispositional traits, but they can design interventions to improve the psychological (state like) resources of the students. Follow-up interviews with academic administrators reinforced these implications.

Originality

This study provided initial evidence that positivity, in general, and PsyCap, in particular, have a positive impact on students’ AA. This is one of the first studies to examine the role of PsyCap in personality–AA relation in the higher educational context wherein high levels of stress and burnouts have been reported by students due to high competition in achieving goals.

Published in: International Journal of Educational Management

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