Family functioning and academic self-efficacy as predictors of academic procrastination in peruvian adolescents

Authors

  • Elizabeth Ysolina Callañaupa Amable Universidad Peruana Unión, Peru
  • Ronal Vásquez Guevara Universidad Peruana Unión, Peru
  • Ana María Salinas Saavedra Universidad Peruana Unión, Peru https://orcid.org/0009-0008-2859-8522
  • Jessica Aranda-Turpo Universidad Peruana Unión, Peru

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15381/rinvp.v27i2.28820

Keywords:

Family functioning, academic self-efficacy, academic procrastination, adolescents

Abstract

The aim of the study was to determine whether family functioning and academic self-efficacy predict academic procrastination in Peruvian adolescents. An associative-predictive study was conducted with 609 adolescents (54.5% males and 45.5% females) with an average age of 14.6 (SD = 1.4). The Family Functioning Scale (APGAR), Academic Situations Specific Perceived Self- Efficacy Scale (EAPESA) and the Academic Procrastination Scale (EPA) , were used to measure the variables. Family functioning (β = -.400; p < .01) and academic self-efficacy (β = -.607; p < .01) were found to be predictors of procrastination, with academic self-efficacy showing the greatest predictive ability on participants' procrastination.

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Published

2024-12-13

Issue

Section

Investigaciones

How to Cite

Callañaupa Amable, E. Y., Vásquez Guevara, R., Salinas Saavedra, A. M., & Aranda-Turpo, J. (2024). Family functioning and academic self-efficacy as predictors of academic procrastination in peruvian adolescents. Revista De Investigación En Psicología, 27(2), e28820. https://doi.org/10.15381/rinvp.v27i2.28820