Student academic procrastination in online and offline learning

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Ali Muhson
Endang Mulyani
Nenden Susilowati
Ahmad Chafid Alwi
Yeni Nur Prilanita

Abstract

Students after attending offline lectures stated that they understood the lecture material better and it was more fun. The purpose of this study is to determine the academic procrastination of students in both offline and online learning, the level of academic procrastination of students, differences in academic procrastination in learning, factors that influence academic procrastination, and the magnitude of the influence of each factor forming it. The analysis technique used is Confirmatory Factor Analysis (CFA) with the Structural Equation Model (SEM) model. ANOVA analysis was used to determine the difference between online and offline learning on self-perception, self-efficacy, self-resilience, and academic procrastination.  The results of this study show that there are differences in self-perception, self-efficacy, self-resilience, and academic procrastination owned by students for online and offline learning. Offline learning is considered better for students as evidenced by the fact that when compared to both learning systems (online and offline), offline learning has higher self-perception, self-efficacy, self-resilience, and academic procrastination than online learning.


 

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How to Cite
Muhson, A., Mulyani, E., Susilowati, N., Alwi, A. C., & Prilanita, Y. N. (2024). Student academic procrastination in online and offline learning. Technium Social Sciences Journal, 53(1), 182–191. https://doi.org/10.47577/tssj.v53i1.10309
Section
Economics

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