Document Type : Original Research Paper

Authors

Department of Educational Management, Shahid Chamran Campus, Farhangian University, Tehran, Iran

Abstract

Background and Objectives: Academic enthusiasm and the factors influencing it are among the key indicators of educational success and the enhancement of students’ psychological well-being. In this regard, life skills — as a set of cognitive, emotional, and social abilities — can affect academic enthusiasm. Moreover, with the increasing use of social networks among students and their dual role in either facilitating or weakening educational interactions, it has become increasingly necessary to examine how these platforms influence the relationship between life skills and academic enthusiasm. The present study aimed to investigate the mediating role of social networks in the relationship between life skills and academic enthusiasm among upper elementary school students.
Methods: From the perspective of research design, this study was descriptive, and in terms of purpose, it was applied. The research method was descriptive-survey of a correlational type, based on structural equation modeling (SEM). The statistical population consisted of 4,521 upper elementary school students from District 4 of Qom. Using the Krejcie and Morgan table, a sample of 384 students was selected through simple random sampling. To measure life skills, the Babadi and Meshkani Children’s Life Skills Questionnaire (2011) was used, which assesses four components among students: social skills, self-regulation, self-control (self-management), and social responsibility. To assess students’ academic enthusiasm, the Fredricks et al. (2012) Academic Engagement Questionnaire was utilized, which measures three components: behavioral engagement, emotional engagement, and cognitive engagement. To measure the use of social networks among students, the Jahanbani (2018) Social Networks Questionnaire was employed, evaluating three components: level of use, type of use, and level of trust in users. The content and face validity of the questionnaires were confirmed by 10 faculty members from the Department of Educational Sciences and Educational Management. Reliability was assessed in two stages — before and after the main implementation of the study. The Cronbach’s alpha coefficients for all questionnaires were above the 0.70 criterion, indicating acceptable reliability. Data were analyzed using correlation and t-tests, Sobel’s test for mediating effects, path coefficients, and model fit indices within the framework of structural equation modeling (SEM) using SmartPLS software.
Findings: The results showed that social networks play a mediating role in the relationship between life skills and students’ academic enthusiasm. Moreover, life skills had a significant effect on social networks, with a t-value of 7.629 (p < 0.001). Similarly, social networks had a significant effect on academic enthusiasm, with a t-value of 6.26 (p < 0.001).
However, the findings indicated that life skills alone did not have a direct and significant effect on students’ academic enthusiasm at the 95% confidence level (t = 0.535, p > 0.05). Nonetheless, through the enhancement and improvement of social network use, life skills indirectly contributed to an increase in academic enthusiasm.
Conclusion: The findings indicated that life skills indirectly, and social networks directly, influence students’ academic enthusiasm. Accordingly, it can be concluded that teaching life skills, alongside the purposeful and informed use of social networks, can play an effective role in enhancing students’ academic enthusiasm. Moreover, social networks provide a significant pathway for transferring the effects of life skills to academic enthusiasm, and their mediating role is statistically validated.

Keywords

Main Subjects

CAPTCHA Image