Modeling the relationships between perfectionism, achievement emotions and academic well-being among gifted high school students: Testing for gender invariance

The present study examined the mediationg role of positive and negative achievement emotions on the relationship between perfectionism and academic well-being among boy and girl gifted adolescents. In this correlational study, 326 gifted students (161 boy and 165 girl) responded to the Multidimensio...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zahra Razavi alavi, omid shokri, Hossein Pourshahriar
Format: Article
Language:fas
Published: Allameh Tabataba'i University Press 2018-01-01
Series:Ravānshināsī-i Afrād-i Istis̠nāyī
Subjects:
id doaj-00fbd0ea8b5b41989a290292a39985c6
record_format Article
spelling doaj-00fbd0ea8b5b41989a290292a39985c62020-11-24T20:43:50ZfasAllameh Tabataba'i University PressRavānshināsī-i Afrād-i Istis̠nāyī2252-00312018-01-017288912910.22054/jpe.2018.25529.1637Modeling the relationships between perfectionism, achievement emotions and academic well-being among gifted high school students: Testing for gender invarianceZahra Razavi alaviomid shokriHossein PourshahriarThe present study examined the mediationg role of positive and negative achievement emotions on the relationship between perfectionism and academic well-being among boy and girl gifted adolescents. In this correlational study, 326 gifted students (161 boy and 165 girl) responded to the Multidimensional Perfectionism Cognitions Inventory (MPCI, Kobori, 2006), the Achievement Emotions Questionnaire- Revised (AEQ-R, Abdollahpour, 1394), the Schoolwork Engagement Inventory (SEI, Salmela-Aro & Upadaya, 2012) and the School Burnout Inventory (SBI, Salmela-Aro, Kiuru, Leskinen & Nurmi, 2009). Results indicated that for total sampel and for boy and girl gifted adolescents, the partially mediated model of positive and negative achievement emotions on the relationship between perfectionism and academic well-being had good fit to data. The results of the group specificity of structural relations showed that the relationship between perfectionism, achievement emotions, academic well-being were equivalent for both groups. All of the regression weights in the global model and for each of the two groups (boy and girl gifted adolescents) were statistically significant. These results consistent with contemporary models of giftedness show that noncognitive concepts such as social/emotional abilities have critical role in prediction of academic functioning of girl and boy gifted high school students.Sex differences; perfectionism; achievement emotions; academic well-being; moderated mediation model
collection DOAJ
language fas
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zahra Razavi alavi
omid shokri
Hossein Pourshahriar
spellingShingle Zahra Razavi alavi
omid shokri
Hossein Pourshahriar
Modeling the relationships between perfectionism, achievement emotions and academic well-being among gifted high school students: Testing for gender invariance
Ravānshināsī-i Afrād-i Istis̠nāyī
Sex differences; perfectionism; achievement emotions; academic well-being; moderated mediation model
author_facet Zahra Razavi alavi
omid shokri
Hossein Pourshahriar
author_sort Zahra Razavi alavi
title Modeling the relationships between perfectionism, achievement emotions and academic well-being among gifted high school students: Testing for gender invariance
title_short Modeling the relationships between perfectionism, achievement emotions and academic well-being among gifted high school students: Testing for gender invariance
title_full Modeling the relationships between perfectionism, achievement emotions and academic well-being among gifted high school students: Testing for gender invariance
title_fullStr Modeling the relationships between perfectionism, achievement emotions and academic well-being among gifted high school students: Testing for gender invariance
title_full_unstemmed Modeling the relationships between perfectionism, achievement emotions and academic well-being among gifted high school students: Testing for gender invariance
title_sort modeling the relationships between perfectionism, achievement emotions and academic well-being among gifted high school students: testing for gender invariance
publisher Allameh Tabataba'i University Press
series Ravānshināsī-i Afrād-i Istis̠nāyī
issn 2252-0031
publishDate 2018-01-01
description The present study examined the mediationg role of positive and negative achievement emotions on the relationship between perfectionism and academic well-being among boy and girl gifted adolescents. In this correlational study, 326 gifted students (161 boy and 165 girl) responded to the Multidimensional Perfectionism Cognitions Inventory (MPCI, Kobori, 2006), the Achievement Emotions Questionnaire- Revised (AEQ-R, Abdollahpour, 1394), the Schoolwork Engagement Inventory (SEI, Salmela-Aro & Upadaya, 2012) and the School Burnout Inventory (SBI, Salmela-Aro, Kiuru, Leskinen & Nurmi, 2009). Results indicated that for total sampel and for boy and girl gifted adolescents, the partially mediated model of positive and negative achievement emotions on the relationship between perfectionism and academic well-being had good fit to data. The results of the group specificity of structural relations showed that the relationship between perfectionism, achievement emotions, academic well-being were equivalent for both groups. All of the regression weights in the global model and for each of the two groups (boy and girl gifted adolescents) were statistically significant. These results consistent with contemporary models of giftedness show that noncognitive concepts such as social/emotional abilities have critical role in prediction of academic functioning of girl and boy gifted high school students.
topic Sex differences; perfectionism; achievement emotions; academic well-being; moderated mediation model
work_keys_str_mv AT zahrarazavialavi modelingtherelationshipsbetweenperfectionismachievementemotionsandacademicwellbeingamonggiftedhighschoolstudentstestingforgenderinvariance
AT omidshokri modelingtherelationshipsbetweenperfectionismachievementemotionsandacademicwellbeingamonggiftedhighschoolstudentstestingforgenderinvariance
AT hosseinpourshahriar modelingtherelationshipsbetweenperfectionismachievementemotionsandacademicwellbeingamonggiftedhighschoolstudentstestingforgenderinvariance
_version_ 1716818803312033792