The Longitudinal Mediating Role of Academic Buoyancy Between Academic Self-Efficacy and Academic Burnout Among Junior High School Students: A Cross-Lagged Study
Licong Ye, Yongchun Xie, Baojuan Ye

TL;DR
The study shows how academic buoyancy helps connect academic self-efficacy and burnout in junior high students over time.
Contribution
This study reveals the longitudinal mediating role of academic buoyancy in the relationship between academic self-efficacy and burnout.
Findings
Academic self-efficacy and buoyancy influence each other over time.
Academic buoyancy reduces academic burnout over four months.
Academic self-efficacy indirectly lowers burnout through buoyancy.
Abstract
This study aims to explore the longitudinal relationship between academic self-efficacy, academic buoyancy, and academic burnout among junior high school students and to reveal the potential mediating role of academic buoyancy. Using cluster sampling, a longitudinal study was conducted on 906 students (mean age = 12.48, 53.3% male) in grades 7 to 9, with three follow-up assessments conducted at four-month intervals. The assessment tools included the Academic Self-Efficacy Questionnaire, the Academic Buoyancy Scale, and the Academic Burnout Questionnaire. The results indicated the following: (1) academic self-efficacy and academic buoyancy exhibit a bidirectional relationship, meaning that academic self-efficacy is associated with increases in academic buoyancy levels four months later, and academic buoyancy also is associated with increases in academic self-efficacy four months later;…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEducation, Achievement, and Giftedness · Perfectionism, Procrastination, Anxiety Studies · Psychological Treatments and Assessments
