Academic Procrastination of High School Students in East Java
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.12928/psikopedagogia.v9i1.17907Keywords:
academic procrastination, survey, descriptiveAbstract
This study aims to obtain a comprehensive view of academic procrastination carried out by students in terms of cognitive, affective, and behavior. This study used a survey research method. The population of this research is high school students in East Java and the research sample is 200 students spread over Malang, Blitar, Bangkalan, and Lamongan. The sampling technique used cluster random sampling and the data were analyzed using descriptive statistics. The results showed that the cognitive, affective, and psychomotor descriptions of students' academic procrastination were found. Counselors can use the findings of this study as the basis for developing BK services, especially in designing intervention strategies to reduce academic procrastination of high school students.References
Akinsola, M.K., Tella, A., dan Adeyinka T. (2007). Correlates of Academic Procrastination and mathematics achievement of university undergraduate students. Eurasia Journal of Mathematics, Science, & Technology Education, 3(4): 363-370.
Akpur, U. (2017). Predictive and explanatory relationship model between procrastination, motivation, anxiety and academic achievement. Eurasian Journal of Educational Research, 69: 221-240.
Asri, D.N., Setyosari, P., Imanuel H., dan Tutut C. (2017). The academic procrastination in junior high school students’ mathematics learning: A Qualitative Study. International Education Studies, 10(9): 70-77.
Borekci, C., dan Uyangor Borekci, C., dan Uyangor, N. (2018). Family attitude, academic procrastination and test anxiety as predictors of academic achievement. International Journal of Educational Methodology, 4(4): 219-226.
Efe, H.A dan Efe, R. (2018). The relationship between academic procrastination behaviors of preservice science teachers and their attitudes toward social media. Journal of Education and e-Learning Research, 5(2): 102-109.
Fulano, C., Cunha, J., Jose C.N., Beatriz P., dan Pedro R. (2018). Mozambican adolescents’ perspective on the academic procrastination process. School Psychology International, 39(2), 196–213.
Grunschel, C., & Schopenhauer, L. (2015). Why are students (not) motivated to change academic procrastination?: An investigation based on the transtheoretical model of change. Journal of College Student Development, 56(2), 187–200.
Korkmaz, O., Ilham, T., dan Salih B. (2018). An investigation of self-efficacy, locus of control, and academic procrastination as predictors of academic achievement in students diagnosed as gifted and non-gifted. European Journal of Education Studies, 4(7): 173-192.
Kurtovic, A., Vrdoljak, G., dan Anita I. (2019). Predicting procrastination: the role of academic achievement, self-efficacy and perfectionism. International Journal of Educational Psychology, 8(1), 1-26.
Lowinger, R. J., Kuo, B. C. H., Song, H.-A., Mahadevan, L., Kim, E., Liao, K. Y.-H., … Han, S. (2016). Predictors of academic procrastination in asian international college students. Journal of Student Affairs Research and Practice, 53(1), 90–104.
Malkoc, A dan Mutlu, A.K. (2018). Academic self-efficacy and academic procrastination: exporing the mediating role of academic motivation in turkish university students. Universal Journal of Educational Research, 6(10): 2087-2093.
Muslikah, M., & Andriyani, A. (2018). Social media user students’ academic procrastination. Psikopedagogia Jurnal Bimbingan dan Konseling. 7(2). 53-57
Nordby, K., Klingsieck, K. B., & Svartdal, F. (2017). Do procrastination-friendly environments make students delay unnecessarily? Social Psychology of Education, 20(3), 491–512.
Ocak, G., dan Boyraz, S. (2016). Examination of The relation between academic procrastination and time management skills of undergraduate in terms of some variables. Journal of Education and Training Studies, 4(5): 76-84.
Ozer, B.U. (2011). Cross sectional study on procrastination: Who procrastinate more?. International Conference on Education, Research and Innovation, 18: 34-37.
Prihadi, K., Tan, C.Y.H., Reimy T.S. Tan, P.L Yong, Jonathan H. E., Yong S.T., Chee Leong Goh, dan Yu Jin Tee. (2018). Mediation role of locus of control on the relationship of learned-helplessness and academic procrastination. International Journal of Evaluation and Research in Education, 7(2): 87-93.
Saracaloglu, A.S., Dincer, B., dan Ceren S.G. (2018). The relationship between music teacher candidates’ academic and general procrastination tendencies and test anxiety. Journal of Education and Training Studies, 6(9): 174-183.
Shih, S.-S. (2016). Factors related to Taiwanese adolescents’ academic procrastination, time management, and perfectionism. The Journal of Educational Research, 110(4), 415–424.
Solomon, L.J dan Rothblum, E.D. (1984). Academic procrastination: frequency and cognitive-behavior correlates. Journal od Counseling Psychology, 31(4): 503-509.
Wu, F., & Fan, W. (2016). Academic procrastination in linking motivation and achievement-related behaviours: a perspective of expectancy-value theory. Educational Psychology, 37(6), 695–711.
Zhang, Y., Dong, S., Wenjie Fang, Xiaohui Chai, Jiaojiao Mei, dan Xiuzhen Fan. (2018). Self-efficacy for self-regulation and fear of failure as mediators between self-esteem and academic procrastination among undergraduates in health professions. Advances in Health Sciences Education, 23(4), 817-830.
Downloads
Issue
Section
License
Authors who publish with PSIKOPEDAGOGIA agree to the following terms:
- Authors retain copyright and grant the journal the right of first publication with the work simultaneously licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0) that allows others to share the work with an acknowledgement of the work's authorship and initial publication in this journal.
- Authors are able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the non-exclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), with an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.
- Authors are permitted and encouraged to post their work online (e.g., in institutional repositories or on their website) prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.