4.1 Article

Soft Skills and Extracurricular Activities Sustain Motivation and Self-Regulated Learning at School

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL EDUCATION
Volume 90, Issue 3, Pages 550-569

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/00220973.2021.1873090

Keywords

Soft skills; XXI century skills; Achievement; Self-Regulated learning; Motivation; Cognitive abilities; Extracurricular Activities

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Soft skills play an important role in academic success, influencing students' self-regulated learning and motivation, which in turn indirectly impact academic achievement. While cognitive abilities are related to academic achievement and motivation, they are unrelated to soft skills. Additionally, extracurricular activities influence soft skills.
Soft skills are important in several life domains, but their role in academic achievement has not been systematically investigated. This study examines how soft skills work together with self-regulated learning, motivation, and cognitive aspects in sustaining success at school. How extracurricular activities relates to these variables is examined too. A sample of 460 school students in years 5 to 12 was enrolled and examined on 6 personal soft skills (i.e. adaptability, personal initiative, perseverance, curiosity, leadership, and social awareness), cognitive abilities (i.e. reasoning, problem solving, mental rotation, working memory), motivation to learn, and self-regulated learning as predictors of their academic achievement. A measure of extracurricular activities was also included in the analysis. The results of a path model show that soft skills predicted self-regulated learning and motivation at school, and - through the latter - they indirectly fostered academic achievement over cognitive abilities. While cognitive abilities also predicted academic achievement and motivation, they were found unrelated to soft skills. Extracurricular activities influenced soft skills. Overall, these findings contribute to enlarging the theoretical framework on soft skills and their relationship with other variables involved in success at school.

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