TOWARD AN UNDERSTANDING OF ACADEMIC AND NONACADEMIC TASKS
PROCRASTINATED BY STUDENTS: THE USE OF DAILY LOGS
Joseph R. Ferrari
DePaul University
Steven J. Scher
Eastern Illinois University
For five consecutive days, at either the beginning or the end of a term,
college students (30 women, 7 men) listed daily academic and nonacademic
tasks they intended to complete and whether they actually completed them.
Students reported nonacademic tasks (e.g., household chores, making
telephone calls, exercising, and playing sports) as completed most often
regardless ot the time within the term. Results from 2 (early vs. later
sessions) by 2 (completed vs. not completed tasks) by 2 (academic vs.
nonacademic tasks) ANOVAs found that procrastinated tasks early in the term
were more effortful and anxiety provoking than any other task during the
term. Procrastinated academic tasks (e.g., homework, reading assignments,
studying) in the early part of a term were rated as unpleasurable, while
students reported later in the term that pleasantness of the task did not
affect whether it was procrastinated or complerted. These results imply
that academic and nonacademic tasks should be challenging, yet fun, to
heighten the likelihood that they are completed by students.
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