Summary: | Academic performance of first year university students in the international arena as well as
locally, has been a point of concern for all stakeholders because of high dropout rates and failure.
Although many explanations for this have been offered and accepted, all have located the
problem external to the individual. This study examined the interplay between interpersonal and
intrapersonal factors on academic performance of first year university students in South Africa. A
sociocognitive perspective was employed by an investigation of student identity processing styles
as a means to explain academic performance. A mixed sample of 419 first year psychology
students at a South African university was randomly chosen. Berzonsky’s Identity Style
Inventory (ISI3) was used to categorise students’ identity processing styles which was then
correlated to students’ mid-year examination results. Although similar research was conducted
overseas, the findings of the present study did not match previous results. Unlike any other
known study the correlation between normative processing style and academic performance of
first year university students was statistically significant but was negative. There was significant
difference only between informational and normative identity processing styles on academic
performance and between informational and diffuse-avoidant processing styles on academic
performance. It was found in this study that culture and race played a role in student identity
processing styles and in turn influenced student academic performance in the first year of
university. A discussion of results, educational implications of findings, limitations of the study
and recommendations for future research are included at the end of this study.
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