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An examination of the self-referent executive processing model of test anxiety: control, emotional regulation, self-handicapping, and examination performance
Authors
A Martin
A Richards
+81 more
AJ Elliot
AJ Martin
AJ Martin
AS Troy
B Egloff
C Cheng
CR Thomas
D Gresham
DA Kenny
David W. Putwain
Schools, and Families Department for Children
DH Rost
DL Bandalos
DW Putwain
DW Putwain
DW Putwain
DW Putwain
DW Putwain
DW Putwain
DW Putwain
DW Putwain
E Gullone
G Matthews
GA Bonanno
IG Sarason
J Green
J Stöber
JC Cassady
JC Cassady
JC Cassady
JJ Gross
JJ Gross
JJ Gross
JM Cisler
JP Connell
K Eum
K Murayama
KL Boehme
KL Dixon-Gordon
L Campbell-Sills
L Hu
L Unwin
LA Brown
LK Muthén
M Cohen
M Covington
M Heene
M Komarraju
M Owens
M Richardson
M Zeidner
M Zeidner
M Zeidner
MS Chapell
N Derakshan
N Derakshan
N Garnefski
NK Segool
NP Embse von der
OP John
PJ O’Carroll
PM Cole
R Hembree
R Pekrun
R Pekrun
R Pekrun
R Schwarzer
R Steinmayr
RA Thompson
RC Martin
RM Topman
RW Preiss
S Dutke
S Maguire
S Plenty
S Srivastava
SA Gadbois
T Bramley
TD Little
V Dhawan
Y Dong
Publication date
Publisher
'Springer Science and Business Media LLC'
Doi
Cite
Abstract
According to the self-referent executive processing (S-REF) model, test anxiety develops from interactions between three systems: executive self-regulation processes, self-beliefs, and maladaptive situational interactions. Studies have tended to examine one system at a time, often in conjunction with how test anxiety relates to achievement outcomes. The aim of this study was to enable a more thorough test of the S-REF model by examining one key construct from each of these systems simultaneously. These were control (a self-belief construct), emotional regulation through suppression and reappraisal (an executive process), and self-handicapping (a maladaptive situational interaction). Relations were examined from control, emotional regulation, and self-handicapping to cognitive test anxiety (worry), and subsequent examination performance on a high-stakes test. Data were collected from 273 participants in their final year of secondary education. A structural equation model showed that higher control was indirectly related to better examination performance through lower worry, higher reappraisal was indirectly related to worse examination performance through higher worry, and higher self-handicapping was related to worse examination performance through lower control and higher worry. These findings suggest that increasing control and reducing self-handicapping would be key foci for test anxiety interventions to incorporate. © 2018 The Author(s
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info:doi/10.1007%2Fs10212-018-...
Last time updated on 11/11/2020
LJMU Research Online (Liverpool John Moores University)
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oai:researchonline.ljmu.ac.uk:...
Last time updated on 23/07/2018