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Cited 13 time in webofscience Cited 13 time in scopus
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The effects of college students' perfectionism on career stress and indecision: self-esteem and coping styles as moderating variables

Authors
Kang, MinchulLee, JuyoungLee, A-Ra
Issue Date
Jun-2020
Publisher
SPRINGER
Keywords
Career stress; Career indecision; Perfectionism; Mixture regression model; Multidimensional perfectionism
Citation
ASIA PACIFIC EDUCATION REVIEW, v.21, no.2, pp 227 - 243
Pages
17
Indexed
SSCI
SCOPUS
KCI
Journal Title
ASIA PACIFIC EDUCATION REVIEW
Volume
21
Number
2
Start Page
227
End Page
243
URI
https://scholarworks.gnu.ac.kr/handle/sw.gnu/6528
DOI
10.1007/s12564-019-09609-w
ISSN
1598-1037
1876-407X
Abstract
This study identified the subgroups (latent classes) of Korean college students according to the influence of perfectionism on career stress and indecision, and explored the effects of sub-factors of perfectionism on career stress and indecision for each subgroup. Also, the study examined how individual self-esteem and stress coping styles affect the subgroup classification. Data from 476 South Korean college students were analyzed via mixture regression and logistic regression. Four latent classes were identified. In class 1, career indecision increased as self-oriented perfectionism increased, and career stress increased as socially prescribed perfectionism increased. In class 2, career stress increased as self-oriented perfectionism increased, whereas both career stress and career indecision decreased as others-oriented perfectionism increased. In class 3, both career stress and career indecision increased as others-oriented perfectionism increased. In class 4, career stress and career indecision decreased as others-oriented perfectionism increased, while career stress increased as socially prescribed perfectionism increased. In differentiating the classes, self-esteem and coping styles were analyzed as predictor variables. The results indicated that self-esteem helped to distinguish class 1 from class 2, and class 1 from class 3. Avoidance-oriented coping style could distinguish class 1 from class 3. Career counselors would benefit by noting that the influence of each sub-trait of perfectionism on career-related issues may vary by latent class, and that self-esteem and coping styles may moderate the effects of perfectionism on career-related issues.
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사회과학대학 (심리학과)
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