General and Life-Domain Procrastination in Highly Educated Adults in Israel

Procrastination is usually perceived as a general behavioral tendency, and was studied mostly in college students in academic settings. Recently there is a growing body of literature to support the study of procrastination in older adults and in different life-domains. Based on these advances in the...

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Main Authors: Meirav Hen, Marina Goroshit
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-07-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01173/full
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spelling doaj-6285426de4a74a678faea4cbdbd113732020-11-24T22:10:06ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782018-07-01910.3389/fpsyg.2018.01173353091General and Life-Domain Procrastination in Highly Educated Adults in IsraelMeirav HenMarina GoroshitProcrastination is usually perceived as a general behavioral tendency, and was studied mostly in college students in academic settings. Recently there is a growing body of literature to support the study of procrastination in older adults and in different life-domains. Based on these advances in the literature, the present study examined procrastination in 430 highly educated adults in Israel. Findings showed that respondents reported significantly higher procrastination in maintaining health behaviors and spending leisure time rather in other life-domains. Forty percent of participants reported high procrastination in health behaviors, while only 9.5% reported this level of procrastination in parenting and 1% in the general tendency to procrastinate. Further findings suggested that 25% of respondents reported high procrastination in four or more life-domains, and 40%—in one to three life-domains. The general tendency to procrastinate was moderately associated with procrastination in finance, education, and career life-domains and weekly with other life-domains. Fourteen percent of participants reported that procrastination influenced their life the most in health behaviors, 12% in career and education and 11% in romance and family life. These initial findings contribute to the overall perspective of life-domain specificity of procrastination in adults, and emphasize the importance to further study and develop a life-span perspective.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01173/fulladult procrastinationgeneral procrastinationlife-domainslife-domain procrastinationhighly educated adults
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Meirav Hen
Marina Goroshit
spellingShingle Meirav Hen
Marina Goroshit
General and Life-Domain Procrastination in Highly Educated Adults in Israel
Frontiers in Psychology
adult procrastination
general procrastination
life-domains
life-domain procrastination
highly educated adults
author_facet Meirav Hen
Marina Goroshit
author_sort Meirav Hen
title General and Life-Domain Procrastination in Highly Educated Adults in Israel
title_short General and Life-Domain Procrastination in Highly Educated Adults in Israel
title_full General and Life-Domain Procrastination in Highly Educated Adults in Israel
title_fullStr General and Life-Domain Procrastination in Highly Educated Adults in Israel
title_full_unstemmed General and Life-Domain Procrastination in Highly Educated Adults in Israel
title_sort general and life-domain procrastination in highly educated adults in israel
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2018-07-01
description Procrastination is usually perceived as a general behavioral tendency, and was studied mostly in college students in academic settings. Recently there is a growing body of literature to support the study of procrastination in older adults and in different life-domains. Based on these advances in the literature, the present study examined procrastination in 430 highly educated adults in Israel. Findings showed that respondents reported significantly higher procrastination in maintaining health behaviors and spending leisure time rather in other life-domains. Forty percent of participants reported high procrastination in health behaviors, while only 9.5% reported this level of procrastination in parenting and 1% in the general tendency to procrastinate. Further findings suggested that 25% of respondents reported high procrastination in four or more life-domains, and 40%—in one to three life-domains. The general tendency to procrastinate was moderately associated with procrastination in finance, education, and career life-domains and weekly with other life-domains. Fourteen percent of participants reported that procrastination influenced their life the most in health behaviors, 12% in career and education and 11% in romance and family life. These initial findings contribute to the overall perspective of life-domain specificity of procrastination in adults, and emphasize the importance to further study and develop a life-span perspective.
topic adult procrastination
general procrastination
life-domains
life-domain procrastination
highly educated adults
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01173/full
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