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The Relationship Between Parental Burnout and Children's Learning Burnout: A Moderated Chain Mediation Model.

Zhaocong LiJingyu LuoFang SongJia LiYue Shen
Published in: Psychological reports (2023)
Learning burnout is a continuous negative psychological state experienced by students. According to Cultural contextual risk theory and Ecological systems theory, family and school are important factors that affect students' psychological and social development. The study discusses the relationship between and mechanisms of parental burnout and children's learning burnout, and the moderating role of school factors in this process based on previous relevant theories and existing research. This study used the Parental Burnout Assessment, the Parent-Child Relationship Scale, the Positive Psychology Questionnaire, the Adolescent Student Burnout Inventory, and School Connectedness Scale to conduct a cluster sampling survey of 1439 primary school students and one of their parents (the primary caregiver) in China. The results showed that parent-child relationship and children's psychological resilience played a mediating role between parental burnout and students' learning burnout. School connection played a moderating role between parent-child conflict and children's psychological resilience. The study's results indicate that parental burnout is a critical risk factor for children's learning burnout and school connection can be a protective factor. This finding suggests that in education, schools should support and work with parents to promote students' psychological and social development. However, the family remains the primary factor affecting students' development.
Keyphrases
  • high school
  • mental health
  • young adults
  • physical activity
  • healthcare
  • social support
  • climate change
  • sleep quality
  • cross sectional
  • depressive symptoms
  • risk assessment
  • quality improvement