List All News ArticlesAcademic Achievement and Life Satisfaction among Local and Migrant Undergraduates: Resilience as a Mediator
Published Date: Thursday, 13 October 2022
Academic Achievement and
Life Satisfaction among Local and Migrant Undergraduates: Resilience as a
Mediator
Erkin Sarı, Pelin Karakuş-Akalın, Melike Bağcı
In this study, we aimed to examine the mediating
roles of resilience dimensions in perceived academic achievement and life
satisfaction association among 99 local and 92 internal migrant undergraduates
studying in Istanbul, Turkey. Mediation analysis revealed that perceiving
higher academic achievement doesn’t directly predict life satisfaction in both
samples. However, being optimistic about personal future mediated perceived
academic achievement and life satisfaction relationship among migrants. For the
locals, social resources (e.g., getting support from friends, feeling happy
with family) were found to be significant mediators. The findings highlighted
that the adaptation to the new cultural environment (e.g., establishing new
friendships, lack of family support) is a major challenge for migrant students.
Additionally, some risk factors (e.g., financial issues, perceived
discrimination) might lead to a negative perception of self (e.g., tendency to
view everything gloomy in difficult periods). Therefore, being hopeful and
optimistic about the future in Turkey may play a protective factor for their
life satisfaction, as our findings suggested.