“…Using samples of secondary school students, academic buoyancy has been shown to be related to higher adaptive cognitions (e.g., self-efficacy and valuing of school) and behaviours (e.g., effort and planning), and lower maladaptive cognitions (e.g., uncertain control and failure avoidance), emotions (academic and test anxiety), and behaviours (self-handicapping) in cross-sectional designs (Malmberg, Hall, & Martin, 2013;Martin & Marsh, 2006;Putwain et al, 2012). In more sophisticated longitudinal designs, also with secondary school students, academic buoyancy has been shown to predict subsequent lower academic and test anxiety and other unpleasant academic emotions (boredom, hopeless, and shame), school stress, uncertain control, emotional instability, and neuroticism, and higher subsequent pleasant academic emotions (enjoyment, hope and pride), self-efficacy, planning, and persistence (Hirvonen, Yli-Kivistö, Putwain, Ahonen, & Kiuru, 2019;Hirvonen, Putwain, Määttä, Ahonen, & Kiuru, 2019;Martin et al, 2010;Martin, Ginns, Brackett, & Malmberg, 2013;Putwain et al, 2016).…”