Signature strengths, such as gratitude, can assist students in navigating the demanding first-year experience. However, more research is needed to explore the role of gratitude in relation to cognitive benefits for students. This article reports on a constructivist grounded theory study that explored South African students' conceptions and enactments of gratitude with regard to their learning efforts. Qualitative data were collected in individual open-ended interviews (n=22, age-range=18-23) and analysed using three interdependent coding phases (initial coding, focused coding and theoretical coding). The resultant grounded theory was titled 'Thanks: Gratitude and learning resilience amongst first-year university students'. The findings revealed that gratitude could take many forms and has a positive qualitative impact on students' learning resilience, and that gratitude and learning resilience are emancipatory in nature. Limitations and areas for further research conclude the discussion.
CITATION STYLE
Mason, H. (2020). Towards a Learning Mindset: First-Year University Studentsâ€TM Qualitative Perspectives on Gratitude in the Context of Learning Effort. Journal of Student Affairs in Africa, 8(2). https://doi.org/10.24085/jsaa.v8i2.4454
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.