| Literature DB >> 34804635 |
Aidos K Bolatov1,2, Anar M Gabbasova1, Raushan K Baikanova1, Bahyt B Igenbayeva1, Dainius Pavalkis3.
Abstract
The study aimed to investigate the influence of psychological well-being and different study format on the academic motivation of 1st-year medical students during the COVID-19 pandemic. Repeated cross-sectional study carried out in November 2020 (time 1) and March 2021 (time 2). During time 1 (N = 273), all students studied online. In time 2 (N = 159), both students who learned online only (N = 86) and students who were taking (N = 33) or passed offline classes (N = 40) were trained. The mental state of the students was stable overtime of observation. The effect of the level of psychological destruction and quality of life affecting by the COVID-19 pandemic on academic motivation was minimal. The level of academic motivation was higher in time 2; this was especially noticeable among students who underwent blended learning. The mediating role of satisfaction with academic life and college belongingness in the relationship between the learning format and motivation was found. Blended type of education during a pandemic is more favorable for students in terms of their motivation to study. Further epidemiological studies are needed to assess the safety of blended learning. However, we would like to emphasize that no cases of COVID-19 in the blended learning format have been reported.Entities:
Keywords: Academic motivation; Blended learning; COVID-19; Medical education; Medical students; Online learning
Year: 2021 PMID: 34804635 PMCID: PMC8589226 DOI: 10.1007/s40670-021-01464-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Sci Educ ISSN: 2156-8650
Fig. 1Study design
The level of academic motivation, quality of life affecting by the COVID-19 and destruction from the COVID-19, academic life satisfaction, college belongingness, and mental health continuum in time 1 (N = 273) and time 2 (N = 159)
| Variable (Cronbach’s alpha) | Time 1 | Time 2 |
|---|---|---|
| Academic motivation (0.794) | 29.66 (7.33) | 31.56 (6.57)* |
| COV-PDS (0.914) | 40.90 (16.21) | 42.01 (16.56) |
| COV19-QoL (0.890) | 2.40 (1.18) | 2.38 (1.11) |
| ALSS (0.899) | 31.06 (7.04) | 32.86 (6.00)* |
| CBQ (0.848) | 52.3 (11.12) | 55.1 (10.24)* |
| MHC-SF (0.885) | 47.0 (16.18) | 50.8 (14.03)* |
COV-PDS COVID-19 Psychological Destruction Scale, COV19-QoL Quality of Life affecting by the COVID-19 pandemic, ALSS Academic Life Satisfaction Scale, CBQ College Belongingness Questioner, MHC-SF Mental Health Continuum-Short Form
*p < 0.05
The level of academic motivation, quality of life affected by the COVID-19 and destruction from the COVID-19, Academic Life Satisfaction and College Belongingness in time 2 (group 1 — n = 86, group 2 — n = 33, group 3 — n = 40)
| Variance | Group 1 | Group 2 | Group 3 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Academic motivation | 30.60 (6.86) | 31.96 (7.15) | 33.26 (5.06)* |
| COV-PDS | 42.41 (16.36) | 41.03 (18.37) | 41.95 (15.81) |
| COV19-QoL | 2.43 (1.02) | 2.43 (1.23) | 2.22 (1.19) |
| ALSS | 32.35 (5.99) | 32.42 (5.99) | 34.33 (5.91)* |
| CBQ | 53.5 (10.34) | 56.2 (10.40) | 57.5 (9.48)* |
| MHC-SF | 49.8 (12.8) | 49.8 (16.5) | 53.7 (14.3) |
COV-PDS COVID-19 Psychological Destruction Scale, COV19-QoL Quality of Life affecting by the COVID-19 pandemic, ALSS Academic Life Satisfaction Scale, CBQ College Belongingness Questioner, MHC-SF Mental Health Continuum-Short Form
*p < 0.05 in comparison with time 1
Correlations of scales (both in time 1 and 2, N = 432)
| (1) | (2) | (3) | (4) | (5) | (6) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (1) Academic motivation | 1 | |||||
| (2) College Belongingness | 0.516** | 1 | ||||
| (3) Academic Life Satisfaction | 0.612** | 0.583** | 1 | |||
| (4) COV19-QoL | −0.160** | −0.426** | −0.331** | 1 | ||
| (5) COV-PDS | −0.133* | −0.372** | −0.281** | 0.691** | 1 | |
| (6) MHC-SF | 0.531** | 0.509** | 0.626** | −0.361** | −0.288** | 1 |
COV-PDS COVID-19 Psychological Destruction Scale; COV19-QoL Quality of Life affecting by the COVID-19 pandemic; MHC-SF Mental Health Continuum-Short Form
*p < 0.05; **p < 0.001
Fig. 2Mediating effect of academic life satisfaction and college belongingness in the relation between time of observation (time 2 vs time 1) and academic motivation. Note: *p < 0.05; **p < 0.001; all presented effects are unstandardized; a1 the effect of time on academic life satisfaction; b1 the effect of academic life satisfaction on academic motivation; a2 the effect of time on college belongingness; b2 the effect of college belongingness on academic motivation; c’ is the direct effect of time on academic motivation, and c is the total effect of time on academic motivation
Direct and indirect effects of study condition in group 3 (vs time 1) and academic life satisfaction and college belongingness over academic motivation: coefficients, errors, significance, and effects percentage
| Effects | B | SE | Percent | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total effect of study condition (group 3) on academic motivation | 3.604 | 1.19 | 0.002 | 100% |
| Direct effect of study condition (group 3) on academic motivation | 1.178 | 0.93 | 0.209 | 32.7 |
| Indirect effect group 3 → college belongingness → academic motivation | 0.812 | 0.31 | 0.008 | 22.5 |
| Indirect effect group 3 → academic life satisfaction → academic motivation | 1.614 | 0.57 | 0.005 | 44.8 |