Trajectories of life satisfaction during one-year period among university students: Relations with measures of achievement strategies and perception of criteria for adulthood

Aim: The aim of this study was to examine how university students’ achievement strategies in an academic context and perceptions of criteria for adulthood relate to life satisfaction trajectories across one year. Methods: A convenience sample of 143 young adults 18-28 years (mean age: 20.9±2.7 yea...

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Main Author: Giovanni Piumatti
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Jacobs Verlag 2017-03-01
Series:South Eastern European Journal of Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.seejph.com/index.php/seejph/article/view/1846
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spelling doaj-27ad75e3b8a34b22a9a1b955e748a7102020-11-25T02:06:02ZengJacobs VerlagSouth Eastern European Journal of Public Health2197-52482017-03-0110.4119/seejph-1846Trajectories of life satisfaction during one-year period among university students: Relations with measures of achievement strategies and perception of criteria for adulthoodGiovanni Piumatti Aim: The aim of this study was to examine how university students’ achievement strategies in an academic context and perceptions of criteria for adulthood relate to life satisfaction trajectories across one year. Methods: A convenience sample of 143 young adults 18-28 years (mean age: 20.9±2.7 years; 109 females and 34 males) attending the University of Turin in northwest Italy completed questionnaires at three points with a six-month interval between each measurement. Latent Growth Curve Modelling and Latent Class Growth Analysis were used to assess longitudinal changes in life satisfaction and the related heterogeneity within the current sample. Results: Three trajectories of life satisfaction emerged: high stable (37%), moderate decreasing (57%), and low stable (6%). At every time point high success expectations were related to a high stable life satisfaction trajectory. In turn, those adopting achievement avoidance strategies were more likely to have low-stable or moderately decreasing life satisfaction trajectories. The perception of the criteria deemed important to be defined as adults did not change across time points or across life satisfaction trajectories’ groups. Conclusion: These findings suggest that self-reported measures of achievement strategies among university students relate longitudinally to life satisfaction levels. Positive and optimistic dimensions of personal striving may be protective factors against the risk of decrease of life satisfaction among university students.       https://www.seejph.com/index.php/seejph/article/view/1846achievement strategiescriteria for adulthooddevelopmental trajectorieslife satisfactionperson-oriented approach.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Giovanni Piumatti
spellingShingle Giovanni Piumatti
Trajectories of life satisfaction during one-year period among university students: Relations with measures of achievement strategies and perception of criteria for adulthood
South Eastern European Journal of Public Health
achievement strategies
criteria for adulthood
developmental trajectories
life satisfaction
person-oriented approach.
author_facet Giovanni Piumatti
author_sort Giovanni Piumatti
title Trajectories of life satisfaction during one-year period among university students: Relations with measures of achievement strategies and perception of criteria for adulthood
title_short Trajectories of life satisfaction during one-year period among university students: Relations with measures of achievement strategies and perception of criteria for adulthood
title_full Trajectories of life satisfaction during one-year period among university students: Relations with measures of achievement strategies and perception of criteria for adulthood
title_fullStr Trajectories of life satisfaction during one-year period among university students: Relations with measures of achievement strategies and perception of criteria for adulthood
title_full_unstemmed Trajectories of life satisfaction during one-year period among university students: Relations with measures of achievement strategies and perception of criteria for adulthood
title_sort trajectories of life satisfaction during one-year period among university students: relations with measures of achievement strategies and perception of criteria for adulthood
publisher Jacobs Verlag
series South Eastern European Journal of Public Health
issn 2197-5248
publishDate 2017-03-01
description Aim: The aim of this study was to examine how university students’ achievement strategies in an academic context and perceptions of criteria for adulthood relate to life satisfaction trajectories across one year. Methods: A convenience sample of 143 young adults 18-28 years (mean age: 20.9±2.7 years; 109 females and 34 males) attending the University of Turin in northwest Italy completed questionnaires at three points with a six-month interval between each measurement. Latent Growth Curve Modelling and Latent Class Growth Analysis were used to assess longitudinal changes in life satisfaction and the related heterogeneity within the current sample. Results: Three trajectories of life satisfaction emerged: high stable (37%), moderate decreasing (57%), and low stable (6%). At every time point high success expectations were related to a high stable life satisfaction trajectory. In turn, those adopting achievement avoidance strategies were more likely to have low-stable or moderately decreasing life satisfaction trajectories. The perception of the criteria deemed important to be defined as adults did not change across time points or across life satisfaction trajectories’ groups. Conclusion: These findings suggest that self-reported measures of achievement strategies among university students relate longitudinally to life satisfaction levels. Positive and optimistic dimensions of personal striving may be protective factors against the risk of decrease of life satisfaction among university students.      
topic achievement strategies
criteria for adulthood
developmental trajectories
life satisfaction
person-oriented approach.
url https://www.seejph.com/index.php/seejph/article/view/1846
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