What makes a collegial higher education student? How personality and goal orientations contribute to prosocial behavior

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Abstract

University professors’ collegiality has received far more attention in higher education research than collegiality among higher education students. Hence, this lack of research concerning higher education students’ collegiality represents a research gap that this study aims to fill. The present study aimed at examining the contribution of personal characteristics and goal orientations to collegiality among higher education students. A total of 196 undergraduate students participated in the study. Path analysis revealed that different personality characteristics (gender, age, type of study program, years in college, and academic self-concept) and traits (Big Five and altruism) are related to goal orientations as well as positive and negative collegiality. Results are discussed regarding theoretical assumptions on pro-social development, measurement problems, and practical applications in higher education courses or trainings.

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Astleitner, H., & Zumbach, J. (2023). What makes a collegial higher education student? How personality and goal orientations contribute to prosocial behavior. Higher Education Research and Development, 42(8), 1840–1854. https://doi.org/10.1080/07294360.2023.2209515

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