Blake Brantley - Procrastination vs Academic Performance

 Procrastination occurs at all levels of education and in all types of jobs in the workforce. Procrastination kills motivation, discipline, and prevents us from unlocking our full potential. How detrimental is procrastination to college students? To test this, college students were given three types of assignments to prepare for a final exam. The three types were frequency of activity on course website, short-quizzes, or 4-5 multiple choice questions, and long-quizzes (equivalent to exam). Procrastination, alongside course participation, explained 50% of the variability in the grades of the students' final exams. Frequency of activity on the website has the strongest positive effect on academic performance and participation in long-quizzes had a weak correlation. Although I wasn't surprised that long-quizzes participation and frequently visiting the course website improved grades, I was surprised by the extent to which it did. I thought there would be a strong correlation between each variable and academic performance because in school, we were always taught the importance of doing one's homework every night, not only for those individual grades, but to prepare for the exams. Hypothetically, if classes only had exams for grading purposes (homework and quizzes wouldn't count as a grade), I wonder if it would be best to cram in the information at the last second compared to consistently studying throughout the year. I say this if the whole purpose was to just pass the class or get an A in the class without caring about actually learning the material. Although procrastination negatively impacts academic performance, the extent to which it does it not as high as many would think.


https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/10852352.2016.1198157#d1e274

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