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Psychological Capital as Mediator between Adaptive Perfectionism and Academic Procrastination
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  • Open Access
  • Published: 30 October 2015

Psychological Capital as Mediator between Adaptive Perfectionism and Academic Procrastination

  • Richard E. Hicks1 &
  • Fiona Meng Yao Wu1 

GSTF Journal of Psychology (JPsych) volume 2, Article number: 6 (2015) Cite this article

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Abstract

Research on perfectionism and separately on procrastination is extensive and both are related in general to negative consequences. However, there has been little research on different forms of perfectionism (maladaptive vs adaptive) and the relationships with procrastination. One study (Seo, 2008) has suggested that self-efficacy mediates between adaptive perfectionism and procrastination in academic settings and leads to more productive outcomes. Identifying further such positive productive factors may prove useful in helping individuals deal with their perfectionism and-or their procrastination tendencies. Positive psychological capital (PsyCap) may be one such other mediator, as PsyCap involves not only self-efficacy but also resilience, hope and optimism—attributes that have been associated separately each in their own right with positive behaviour and not with normal academic procrastination Most studies of PsyCap have occurred in organisational settings and may also be considered to be important attributes in the academic setting. Psychological capital as a positive mediator between adaptive perfectionism and procrastination in an academic setting was therefore examined in the current study, with results supporting the mediation effect. The implication is that those students with perfectionistic attributes can be helped to control some of the negative outcomes (such as procrastination) by developing skills in psychological capital. How this might work is discussed. Further detailed studies are needed including replication and identification of other mediators.

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Authors and Affiliations

  1. Bond University, Queensland, Australia

    Richard E. Hicks & Fiona Meng Yao Wu

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  1. Richard E. Hicks
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  2. Fiona Meng Yao Wu
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Authors’ profile

Dr Richard E Hicks is a Professor of Psychology at Bond University, Queensland, Australia with research interests in occupational, clinical, health and counseling psychology.
Miss Fiona Meng Yao holds a Post Graduate Diploma of Psychology from Bond University, Queensland, and is operating as a Research Assistant while pursuing higher-level professional psychology training.

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Cite this article

Hicks, R., Wu, F. Psychological Capital as Mediator between Adaptive Perfectionism and Academic Procrastination. GSTF J Psych 2, 6 (2015). https://doi.org/10.7603/s40790-015-0006-y

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  • Received: 03 May 2015

  • Accepted: 17 May 2015

  • Published: 30 October 2015

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.7603/s40790-015-0006-y

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Keywords

  • Psychological capital
  • perfectionism
  • adaptive perfectionism
  • procrastination
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