BACKGROUND:
There is growing acknowledgment that medical education can be a stressful experience for students and may have a devastating effect on their psychological well-being. The present article, therefore, aimed at investigating students' academic resilience as a mediating variable in self-efficacy-test anxiety relation.
MATERIALS AND METHODS:
In this cross-sectional correlational study, a convenience sample of 243 medical students was selected and participated, three prevalidated questionnaires were applied, that is, general self-efficacy questionnaire, academic resilience questionnaire, and test anxiety questionnaire. To analyze the data, Pearson's correlation coefficient as well as structural equation modeling (SEM) were used.
RESULTS:
According to Pearson's coefficients, self-efficacy was found to be positively correlated with academic resilience (
r
= 0.437,
P
≤ 0.01) and negatively with test anxiety (
r
= −0.475,
P
≤ 0.01). SEM results also indicated that self-efficacy positively impacts on academic resilience (β = 0.43,
P
< 0.001) and negatively on test anxiety (β = −0.37,
P
< 0.001). In addition, results demonstrated the mediating role of academic resilience in self-efficacy-test anxiety relationship (β = −0.108,
P
< 0.001).
CONCLUSION:
This study showed that academic resilience could play a mediating role in students' self-efficacy-test anxiety relationship.