Mykolo Romerio universiteto studentų patiriamo streso įveikos strategijos
Stress Experienced by Students of Mykolas Romeris University and Strategies for Coping with It
Author(s): Jolita Dudaitė, Stasė UstilaitėSubject(s): Education
Published by: Mykolas Romeris University
Keywords: student stress; stress coping strategies
Summary/Abstract: Aim of the article – to evaluate stress experienced by Mykolas Romeris University students and to identify stress coping strategies. Methods. The study was carried out in September-December of 2012 at Mykolas Romeris University. The questionnaire was used as the survey method. The sample consisted of randomly selected 450 students. The students of all courses – both undergraduates and postgraduates – participated in the survey. The age of students was from 19 to 25 years old. The following data analysis methods were used: Cronbach’s alpha index, Pearson’s χ2 test, Spearman’s correlation, factor analysis with Varimax rotation. Results and conclusions. The data show that 90 percent of respondents feel stress. Women tend to feel more stress than men. More than a half of the women (51.8 percent) indicated that they feel stress often or very often, while the same answer was given by less than a quarter of men (23.6 percent). Factor analysis revealed that all stress factors can be grouped into three main factors: social relationships (difficulties in communicating with boyfriend/girlfriend, disagreements with friends, emotional, physical or sexual abuse, bullying, serious illness and accidents of family members or of close friends); everyday stress (lack of sleep, fatigue, rush); study problems (high load training, exams, competition between students, odds with professors). It was found that Mykolas Romeris University students have three main stress coping strategies: positive self-help (listening to music, going to sleep, engaging in any physical activity or other enjoyable activities, dancing, going for a walk, interacting with animals, trying to look at the problematic situation differently, looking for support, trying to resolve the problem, trying to look to the situation in a positive way); looking for support in others or elsewhere: in humans, God or medicine (going to a psychologist or psychotherapist, praying, meditating, using sedatives, drinking soothing tea), negative self-help (smoking, alcohol, drugs, overeating).
Journal: Socialinių mokslų studijos
- Issue Year: 6/2014
- Issue No: 3
- Page Range: 633-647
- Page Count: 15
- Language: Lithuanian