Fostering learning engagement: the impact of different interpersonal relationships from the perspective of positive youth development.

Front Psychol

Wellbeing Research Centre, Faculty of Social Sciences and Liberal Arts, UCSI University, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

Published: January 2025

Learning engagement is a crucial factor affecting the quality of learning and holds significant value in promoting student development and enhancing teaching quality. By using time-lagged data from four schools and considering intentional self-regulation, this study integrates three types of relationships (parent-child, teacher-student, and peer relationships) into the same research framework to examine their impacts on learning engagement and the underlying mechanisms among high school students. The findings reveal that parent-child, teacher-student, and peer relationships all significantly positively affect high school students' learning engagement. Intentional self-regulation plays a partial mediation effect between parent-child relationship and learning engagement, teacher-student relationship and learning engagement, along with peer relationship and learning engagement. The unique effect of peer relationship on learning engagement is significantly greater than that of teacher-student relationship but is not significantly greater than that of parent-child relationship. To better create a supportive synergy for enhancing students' learning engagement, it is suggested that families and schools provide consistent learning support within their capabilities.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11738624PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1419588DOI Listing

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