Hedonic and Eudaimonic Motives: Associations with Academic Achievement and Negative Emotional States among Urban College Students.

Maria Kryza-Lacombe, Elise Tanzini, Sarah O' Neill
Author Information
  1. Maria Kryza-Lacombe: San Diego State University / University of California San Diego Joint Doctoral Program in Clinical Psychology.
  2. Elise Tanzini: Center for Addiction and Mental Health, Toronto, Canada.
  3. Sarah O' Neill: The City College of New York and The Graduate Center, City University of New York.

Abstract

College students from diverse ethnic and socioeconomic backgrounds are at risk for poorer academic outcomes and greater psychopathology and it is important to identify factors that are amenable to intervention and enhance college outcomes. Recent literature has entertained happiness as a potential predictor of various success outcomes and it has been suggested that parsing the concept of happiness into hedonia (seeking pleasure and relaxation) and eudaimonia (seeking meaning) may be particularly useful. This study examined the relations between hedonic and eudaimonic motives for action and student outcomes; that is, academic achievement and their negative emotional states, in an ethnically and socioeconomically diverse urban college population. Undergraduate students (N=119; mean age=21.24 [SD=3.16] years; 59.7 % female) completed self-reported measures of hedonic and eudaimonic motives for action, and depression, anxiety, and stress. Semester GPA was collected from school records. Hedonic motives for action ("Hedonia") were not associated with GPA or students' negative emotional states. Eudaimonic motives for action ("Eudaimonia"), however, were significantly positively associated with GPA, Individuals with high levels of both Hedonia and Eudaimonia (the Full Life) had higher GPAs compared to individuals with low Eudaimonia, but did not differ from students with high Eudaimonia and low Hedonia (Eudaimonic Life). Eudaimonia was also significantly negatively associated with Depression and Stress, and individuals high in Eudaimonia had the lowest levels of both of these outcomes compared to those with low Eudaimonia. Eudaimonic motives may be important for more desirable college outcomes, and interventions that promote development of this domain may hold promise.

Keywords

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Grants

  1. SC2 HD086868/NICHD NIH HHS

Word Cloud

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