Academic procrastinators : people who lack motivation and self-regulation.

Academic procrastination according to reviewed literature is a pretty common phenomenon and a relatively detrimental and negative habit when it interacts with the performing of academic tasks. In most studies, academic procrastination poses anxiety problems causing individuals to feel fatigue and ca...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ng, Wei Yang.
Other Authors: Qiu Zi Qiang
Format: Final Year Project (FYP)
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/50926
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author Ng, Wei Yang.
author2 Qiu Zi Qiang
author_facet Qiu Zi Qiang
Ng, Wei Yang.
author_sort Ng, Wei Yang.
collection NTU
description Academic procrastination according to reviewed literature is a pretty common phenomenon and a relatively detrimental and negative habit when it interacts with the performing of academic tasks. In most studies, academic procrastination poses anxiety problems causing individuals to feel fatigue and cause them to not be able to complete academic task before the given headline. Academic procrastination as some researchers bring forward, are mainly contributed by the low level of motivation involved with performing of the academic tasks. Low self-regulation of the self also contributes to the high tendency of academic procrastination. Despite a majority of studies done on observing the negative outcomes brought about by academic procrastination, the concept may in fact be conducive for academic task completion in some contexts. Active procrastination orientation gives individuals the much needed motivation to endure throughout the academic task and even more so when faced with a time constraint. Passive procrastination does not work as well in comparison but can still turn out positive outcomes if it a task-approach is utilized. Much more is needed to be researched in the fundamental theories of academic procrastination. One such approach is to generalize the study on the general population and also using new study methods in order to collect data accuracy and validity. These approaches serve to help in setting the grounding fundamentals of the still unfixed concept of academic procrastination.
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spelling ntu-10356/509262019-12-10T11:33:32Z Academic procrastinators : people who lack motivation and self-regulation. Ng, Wei Yang. Qiu Zi Qiang School of Humanities and Social Sciences Qiu Lin DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology Academic procrastination according to reviewed literature is a pretty common phenomenon and a relatively detrimental and negative habit when it interacts with the performing of academic tasks. In most studies, academic procrastination poses anxiety problems causing individuals to feel fatigue and cause them to not be able to complete academic task before the given headline. Academic procrastination as some researchers bring forward, are mainly contributed by the low level of motivation involved with performing of the academic tasks. Low self-regulation of the self also contributes to the high tendency of academic procrastination. Despite a majority of studies done on observing the negative outcomes brought about by academic procrastination, the concept may in fact be conducive for academic task completion in some contexts. Active procrastination orientation gives individuals the much needed motivation to endure throughout the academic task and even more so when faced with a time constraint. Passive procrastination does not work as well in comparison but can still turn out positive outcomes if it a task-approach is utilized. Much more is needed to be researched in the fundamental theories of academic procrastination. One such approach is to generalize the study on the general population and also using new study methods in order to collect data accuracy and validity. These approaches serve to help in setting the grounding fundamentals of the still unfixed concept of academic procrastination. Bachelor of Arts 2012-12-21T06:37:41Z 2012-12-21T06:37:41Z 2012 2012 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/50926 en Nanyang Technological University 41 p. application/pdf
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology
Ng, Wei Yang.
Academic procrastinators : people who lack motivation and self-regulation.
title Academic procrastinators : people who lack motivation and self-regulation.
title_full Academic procrastinators : people who lack motivation and self-regulation.
title_fullStr Academic procrastinators : people who lack motivation and self-regulation.
title_full_unstemmed Academic procrastinators : people who lack motivation and self-regulation.
title_short Academic procrastinators : people who lack motivation and self-regulation.
title_sort academic procrastinators people who lack motivation and self regulation
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/50926
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