Do Students with Varying Academic Ability Benefit Equally from Personal Qualities? Applying a Trait and State Perspective
Files
Publication date
2018-12
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
Abstract
Using multilevel models, this study examined whether students with varying academic ability benefit equally from perseverance and intellectual curiosity in terms of academic achievement. In addressing this question two perspectives were applied: a trait perspective, focusing on differences between students, and a state perspective, focusing on differences within students across semesters. By means of an online questionnaire, undergraduate students (N = 2272) were asked to rate themselves on perseverance and intellectual curiosity at the beginning of five consecutive semesters. Results indicate that academic ability but also personal qualities have to be taken into account to explain the dif-ferences between students in academic achievement. In particular perseverance was found to be important in explaining differences both between students and within students across semesters. Also, individual students fluctuate quite substantially in their reported persever-ance and intellectual curiosity from semester to semester.
Keywords
Perseverance, Intellectual curiosity, Academic achievement, Academic ability, Moderation
Citation
Kool, A, Mainhard, M T, Jaarsma, D, van Beukelen, P & Brekelmans, J M G 2018, 'Do Students with Varying Academic Ability Benefit Equally from Personal Qualities? Applying a Trait and State Perspective', Research in Higher Education, vol. 59, no. 8, pp. 1021-1034. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11162-018-9498-y