- Title
- The personal, career and learning skill needs of first year psychology students
- Creator
- Norris, Toni Louise
- Subject
- Personality and academic achievement -- South Africa
- Subject
- Personality assessment
- Subject
- Students -- South Africa -- Psychology
- Subject
- Learning ability
- Date
- 2008
- Type
- Thesis
- Type
- Masters
- Type
- M Soc Sc (Psych)
- Identifier
- vital:11605
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/10353/140
- Identifier
- Personality and academic achievement -- South Africa
- Identifier
- Personality assessment
- Identifier
- Students -- South Africa -- Psychology
- Identifier
- Learning ability
- Description
- This study assessed the personal, career and learning skills needs of 196 psychology students (M= 56, F= 103). The preferred means of counselling assistance, preferred experience of counselling and preferred counselling provider were also assessed. The most highly endorsed needs were time management skills (83.5 percent, n=162), learning test-taking strategies (82 percent, n=159), job search strategies (73.6 percent, n=142), increasing self-confidence (70.3 percent, n=135), increasing motivation (72.4 percent, n=134), controlling anxiety and nervousness (68.7 percent, n=134), public speaking anxiety (68.4percent, n=134), understanding career interests and abilities (67.5 percent, n=131), fear of failure (68.1 percent, n=130), and improving study skills (66.5 percent, n=129). Significant sex differences were found for the following, finding a greater purpose in life, controlling weight, job search strategies, concerns about career choice, understanding career interests and abilities in the selection of major subjects and improving study skills. Males highly endorsed the need for finding a greater purpose in life, job search strategies, and concern about career choice, understanding career interest and abilities, selection of major subjects and to improve study skills, whereas females endorsed the need for controlling weight. Respondents indicated individual counselling as being their preferred means of counselling assistance, but lectures were the most prevalent means of assistance previously received by respondents. Most respondents (78.1 percent) found the assistance they had received to be helpful.
- Format
- 66 leaves; 30 cm
- Format
- Publisher
- University of Fort Hare
- Publisher
- Faculty of Social Sciences & Humanities
- Language
- English
- Rights
- University of Fort Hare
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