Direct and indirect effects of father-child attachment on academic burnout in college students

Front Psychol. 2024 Mar 12:15:1345590. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1345590. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

The study aims to investigate the multiple mediating roles of core self-evaluation and sense of school belonging in the relationship between father-child attachment and academic burnout in college students. A sample of 418 college students completed the father-child attachment scale, the scale of sense of school belonging, core self-evaluation scale, and academic burnout scale. After controlling for variables such as mother-child attachment, gender, age, and grade, the results showed: (1) father-child attachment was significantly and negatively correlated with academic burnout, and positively correlated with core self-evaluation and sense of school belonging; both core self-evaluation and sense of school belonging were significantly and negatively correlated with academic burnout. (2) The multiple mediating model of father-child attachment influencing academic burnout in college students was established. Both core self-evaluation and sense of school belonging played a partial mediating role between father-child attachment and academic burnout. The direct effect of father-child attachment on academic burnout accounts for 33.3% of the total effect. The indirect effects of core self-evaluation and sense of school belonging between father-child attachment and academic burnout account for 50.0 and 16.7% of the total effect, respectively. These findings identify the internal mechanisms through which father-child attachment affects academic burnout in college students from personal traits and interpersonal perspectives.

Keywords: academic burnout; core self-evaluation; father-child attachment; multiple mediating effects; sense of school belonging.

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare that financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. The study was financially supported by the Humanities and Social Sciences Research Project of Hubei Province of China (18Z409).