Burnout académico, regulación emocional y compromiso académico en estudiantes universitarios de Lima Metropolitana
Fecha
Autores
Título de la revista
ISSN de la revista
Título del volumen
Editor
Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú
Acceso al texto completo solo para la Comunidad PUCP
Resumen
La presente investigación tuvo como objetivo analizar la relación entre burnout académico,
regulación emocional y compromiso académico en estudiantes universitarios de Lima
Metropolitana. Participaron 115 estudiantes, 64 mujeres (55.7%) y 51 varones (44.3%), de
diversas carreras y universidades, con edades entre 18 y 28 años (M = 21.4, DE = 2.5). Se
empleó un diseño transversal y correlacional. Se aplicó el Inventario de Burnout para
Estudiantes (MBI-SS), el Cuestionario de Regulación Emocional (ERQ) y la Escala de
Compromiso Académico (UWES-S-9). Los resultados mostraron que el burnout académico se
correlacionó positivamente con la supresión emocional (r = .38, p < .001) y negativamente con
la reevaluación cognitiva (r = −.24, p = .008). El compromiso académico se relacionó
negativamente con el burnout global (r = −.77, p < .001), en particular con agotamiento (r =
−.51, p < .001) y cinismo (r = −.65, p < .001), y positivamente con la autoeficacia académica
(r = .61, p < .001). Por dimensiones, la supresión se asoció con agotamiento (r = .40, p < .001)
y cinismo (r = .24, p = .009); la reevaluación se relacionó negativamente con cinismo (r = −.29,
p = .002) y positivamente con autoeficacia (r = .46, p < .001). No hubo asociación entre
reevaluación y agotamiento, ni entre supresión y autoeficacia. Los análisis de regresión
múltiple mostraron que el compromiso académico predice significativamente menores niveles
de burnout académico, mientras que la supresión emocional predice mayor nivel de burnout.
This study examined the relationships among academic burnout, emotion regulation, and academic engagement in university students from Metropolitan Lima. The sample comprised 115 students, including 64 women (55.7%) and 51 men (44.3%), from diverse universities, aged 18 to 28 years (M = 21.4, SD = 2.5). A cross-sectional, correlational design was used. The Maslach Burnout Inventory–Student Survey (MBI-SS), the Emotion Regulation Questionnaire (ERQ), and the Utrecht Work Engagement Scale–Student Version (UWES-S-9) were administered. Results showed that academic burnout correlated positively with expressive suppression (r = .38, p < .001) and negatively with cognitive reappraisal (r = −.24, p = .008). Academic engagement was negatively related to burnout (r = −.77, p < .001), particularly exhaustion (r = −.51, p < .001) and cynicism (r = −.65, p < .001), and positively related to academic efficacy (r = .61, p < .001). By dimensions, suppression was associated with exhaustion (r = .40, p < .001) and cynicism (r = .24, p = .009), whereas reappraisal was negatively associated with cynicism (r = −.29, p = .002) and positively associated with efficacy (r = .46, p < .001). No associations were found between reappraisal and exhaustion, or between suppression and efficacy. Multiple regression analyses indicated that academic engagement significantly predicted lower overall academic burnout, whereas expressive suppression predicted higher burnout.
This study examined the relationships among academic burnout, emotion regulation, and academic engagement in university students from Metropolitan Lima. The sample comprised 115 students, including 64 women (55.7%) and 51 men (44.3%), from diverse universities, aged 18 to 28 years (M = 21.4, SD = 2.5). A cross-sectional, correlational design was used. The Maslach Burnout Inventory–Student Survey (MBI-SS), the Emotion Regulation Questionnaire (ERQ), and the Utrecht Work Engagement Scale–Student Version (UWES-S-9) were administered. Results showed that academic burnout correlated positively with expressive suppression (r = .38, p < .001) and negatively with cognitive reappraisal (r = −.24, p = .008). Academic engagement was negatively related to burnout (r = −.77, p < .001), particularly exhaustion (r = −.51, p < .001) and cynicism (r = −.65, p < .001), and positively related to academic efficacy (r = .61, p < .001). By dimensions, suppression was associated with exhaustion (r = .40, p < .001) and cynicism (r = .24, p = .009), whereas reappraisal was negatively associated with cynicism (r = −.29, p = .002) and positively associated with efficacy (r = .46, p < .001). No associations were found between reappraisal and exhaustion, or between suppression and efficacy. Multiple regression analyses indicated that academic engagement significantly predicted lower overall academic burnout, whereas expressive suppression predicted higher burnout.
Descripción
Palabras clave
Estudiantes universitarios--Investigaciones--Perú--Lima, Stress (Psicología), Emociones--Aspectos psicológicos, Rendimiento académico
Citación
Colecciones
item.page.endorsement
item.page.review
item.page.supplemented
item.page.referenced
Licencia Creative Commons
Excepto donde se indique lo contrario, la licencia de este ítem se describe como https://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_abf2
