Information from the abstract
Abstract Academic failure is a common but emotionally significant experience for university students, often leading to internalized self-blame. However, the extent to which self-blame motivates constructive growth or undermines well-being remains unclear. This study explored how university students interpret academic setbacks through the lens of personalization, defined as attributing failure to internal or external causes. Using qualitative thematic analysis, we examined open-ended responses from 485 students at Malaysian public universities to understand how they assign responsibility for failure, interpret its causes, and describe their responses to academic setbacks. The analysis revealed four attributional patterns: behavioral self-blame, characterological self-blame, shared attribution of responsibility, and growth-oriented reinterpretation. Although many students engaged in internal attributions, their emotional and motivational responses varied substantially, ranging from discouragement and helplessness to reflection and motivation for improvement. A key contribution of this study is the qualitative distinction between adaptive behavioral self-blame and maladaptive characterological self-blame within students’ lived experiences of academic failure. These findings highlight the importance of promoting balanced attributional interpretations and resilience-supportive educational practices that help students interpret academic setbacks as manageable learning experiences rather than as reflections of fixed personal inadequacy. The study provides qualitative insight into how students construct meaning amid academic adversity and offers implications for educational interventions that support adaptive coping and student resilience.
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Related topics: Psychological Treatments and Assessments · Resilience and Mental Health · Perfectionism, Procrastination, Anxiety Studies
Thai researcher and institutional participation
Fei Zhou · Chunyan Yang · Shinawatra University
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