Perceived Teacher Enthusiasm and Professional Commitment: The Mediating Role of Boredom and Learning Engagement

Psychol Res Behav Manag. 2023 Apr 11:16:1149-1163. doi: 10.2147/PRBM.S400137. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Introduction: Some students in current society do not pursue careers related to their majors after graduation, which may be the result of low professional commitment of college students, and the teaching enthusiasm of college teachers presented in the classroom may influence students' professional commitment. This study considered the effect of teacher enthusiasm on students' emotional state of boredom during class and its effect on students' engagement in learning. This correlational study aims to explore the relationship between perceived teacher enthusiasm and professional commitment as mediated by class-related boredom and learning engagement.

Methods: This study is a correlational design and adopts regression analysis. The respondents were college students (n=358; 68% female, 22% male) of different grades and majors from universities in Wenzhou, China. Questionnaires about perceived teacher enthusiasm, professional commitment, class-related boredom and learning engagement were adopted to measure the study variables.

Results: The results reveal that although there is no significant direct influence between perceived teacher enthusiasm and professional commitment, perceived teacher enthusiasm affects students' professional commitment through students' class-related boredom and learning engagement, and there is an indirect and statistically significant correlation between them.

Conclusion: This study provides insight into the facilitative effect of teachers' increased enthusiasm on students' professional commitment and how this facilitative effect is triggered through the mediating role of class related boredom and learning engagement. Future research should explore the theoretical and teaching significance and how to guide and enhance students' professional commitment.

Keywords: class-related boredom; learning engagement; perceived teacher enthusiasm; professional commitment.

Grants and funding

This research was supported by the key project of Zhejiang Province’s education science Planning (Grant No. 2023SB090), China’s 2022 Ministry of Education Humanities and Social Sciences Research Special Task Project (Grant No.22JDSZ3169).