Search published articles


Showing 4 results for kavousian

Javad Kavousian, Parvin Kadivar, Valiolah Farzad,
Volume 6, Issue 1 (12-2012)
Abstract

The current study investigates the mediating role of basic psychological needs (autonomy competence and relatedness), motivational self-regulation (intrinsic motivation, extrinsic motivation and academic demotivation) and academic excitement (class enjoyment and learning hopelessness) in the relationship between environmental factors supporting student's academic autonomy and school well-being. Through multi stage cluster sampling, 520 male and female students were selected from Karaj’s high schools. The tools used in this study included teacher’s supporting student’s autonomy scale, parents’ supporting student’s autonomy scale, the scale of relationship with classmates, basic psychological needs scale, academic motivation scale, school well-being scale, and academic emotions questionnaire. Data were analyzed by confirmatory factor analysis, cronbach alpha and structural equation modeling. Findings of the study demonstrated that teacher’s supporting student’s autonomy parents’ supporting student’s autonomy and the relationships with the classmates had a significant and direct effect on the basic psychological needs. Furthermore, teacher’s supporting student’s autonomy through mediatory variables of the study didn’t have direct and significant effect on school well-being. However the indirect effect of parents’ supporting student’s autonomy was significant. Autonomy, relatedness, academic demotivation and class enjoyment had significant direct effect on school well-being. In addition, autonomy, competence, relatedness, academic intrinsic and extrinsic motivation had an indirect, significant effect on school well-being .Therefore, it can be concluded that basic psychological needs, motivational self-regulation and academic emotions played a mediating role between the environmental variables supporting student’s autonomy and school well-being.
Zeynab Maleki, Phd Javad Kavousian, Phd Parvin Kadivar, Phd Mehdi Arabzadeh,
Volume 19, Issue 1 (Volume 19, Issue 1, Spring 2025)
Abstract

The present study aimed to present a structural model of academic identity, family communication patterns, and parents'perceived educational expectations with the mediating role of basic psychological needs. The research method was descriptive-correlational and structural equation modeling. The statistical population included all tenth and eleventh grade students in Yazd in the academic year 2021-2022. The statistical sample included 400 tenth and eleventh grade students who were randomly selected as clusters. To collect data, the Basic Psychological Needs Questionnaire, the Academic Identity Status Questionnaire, Family Communication Patterns Questionnaire, and the Parents' Perceived Educational Expectations Questionnaire were used. In order to examine the paths of the research model, structural equation modeling was used using PLS3 software. The results showed that parents' educational expectations, conformity pattern, and conversation pattern have a direct, positive, and significant effect on basic psychological needs. The results also showed that basic psychological needs have a direct, negative, and significant effect on the follower identity and the confused identity and a direct, positive, and significant effect on the latecomer identity and the successful identity. Finally, the results showed that basic psychological needs play a mediating role in the relationship between academic identity and family communication patterns and parents'perceived educational expectations.
 
Miss Parirokh Mamaghani Miandoab, Dr Javad Kavousian, Dr Mehdi Arabzadeh, Dr Balal Izanloo,
Volume 19, Issue 1 (Volume 19, Issue 1, Spring 2025)
Abstract

The present study aimed to identify the factors influencing online gaming addiction among adolescents using a qualitative research design and semi-structured interviews method based on grounded theory. The participants of this study included 20 boy adolescent aged 13 to 18 years in Tehran who were selected using a theoretical sampling method. Based on the findings, the causes of online gaming addiction were found to be filling leisure time, personal, communication, fame, and wealth acquisition. Also, personal, work, marketing, and perceived social support factors in individual, social, and family dimensions play an important role in the occurrence of this phenomenon. Improving accuracy and concentration, controlling anger, cheerfulness, and relieving depression in the individual dimension, and making friends, becoming professional, and becoming famous in the social dimension, were positive consequences of online gaming addiction. Finally, lack of time for daily activities and academic and personal failure, damage to physical health in the individual dimension, and not being understood by the family in the family dimension were the negative consequences of online game addiction. It is suggested that education planners focus their counseling programs on how to fill leisure time usefully, create enjoyable personalized entertainment, Deal with stress and Satisfy individual needs.
 
Mrs. Mana Rashidi, Dr. Hadi Keramati, Dr. Hamidreza Hassan Abadi, Dr. Javad Kavousian,
Volume 19, Issue 2 (Volume19, Issue 2 2025)
Abstract

This study aimed to investigate the relationship between attachment to the father and mother, and childhood trauma with proactive-reactive aggression, considering the mediating role of student-teacher interaction. The present study was applied in terms of its purpose, descriptive-correlational in terms of its nature, cross-sectional in terms of time, and quantitative in terms of data type. The statistical population included second and third year high school and pre-university students in Tehran in 1401-1402, and 215 subjects were selected as the sample size. To collect data, questionnaires were used, including Bernstein et al.'s (1988) Childhood Trauma Questionnaire, Armsden and Greenberg’s (1987) Attachment Styles Questionnaire, Ryan et al.'s (2006) Proactive-Reactive Aggression Questionnaire, Wolters et al.'s (1993) Student-Teacher Interaction Questionnaire, and PISA’s (2012) Socioeconomic Status Questionnaire. Data analysis was performed in two parts: descriptive and inferential statistics using Spss-V23 and Pls-V3 software. The findings showed that attachment to the father and mother did not directly affect student-teacher interaction, and childhood trauma directly had a significant effect on student-teacher interaction. Also, attachment to the father does not indirectly affect aggression, and attachment to the mother and childhood trauma indirectly have a significant effect on aggression.


Page 1 from 1     

© 2025 CC BY-NC 4.0 |

Designed & Developed by : Yektaweb