How and When Leisure Crafting Enhances College Students' Well-Being: A (Quantitative) Weekly Diary Study

Psychol Res Behav Manag. 2022 Feb 15:15:273-290. doi: 10.2147/PRBM.S344717. eCollection 2022.

Abstract

Purpose: College students' well-being is important for their self-growth and the whole society. However, we still know relatively little about how college students could proactively, strategically improve their well-being in the leisure context. Following the self-determination theory and proactivity literature, this study examines how and when leisure crafting (ie, a proactive act whereby individuals balance their leisure resources and demands by utilizing their personal abilities and needs) can enhance college students' well-being.

Methods: Conducting a quantitative weekly diary study of 80 Chinese students in an engineering college (320 observations), we drew a moderated mediation model.

Results: We found that weekly leisure crafting behaviors (ie, seeking structural leisure resources, seeking social leisure resources, seeking leisure challenges, and reducing hindering leisure demands) were positively related to weekly intrinsic need satisfaction (ie, need for competence, autonomy, and relatedness), then resulting in higher weekly subjective well-being (ie, physical thriving, mental health, and life meaningfulness). Moreover, this indirect effect was stronger for those who had a higher level of leisure boredom.

Conclusion: Our study contributes to student development and well-being literature by focusing on the students' leisure context and providing a means to enhance their well-being. We unfold how the leisure crafting strategy boosts college students' well-being via increasing their intrinsic need satisfaction. We also highlight the compensating role of leisure crafting when one is in an unfavorable personal state (eg, leisure boredom).

Keywords: college student; diary study; intrinsic need satisfaction; leisure boredom; leisure crafting; well-being.