Abstract
The experience of academic boredom among students may be universal; in fact, almost all students complain at least occasionally about being bored in class or while studying. Despite the perceived negative influence of boredom on learning, there has been no synthesis of empirical findings underscoring how boredom relates to academic outcomes. Therefore, the purpose of this study is to meta-analyze the research exploring the relationship between students’ academic boredom and their motivation, study strategies and behaviors, and performance. A total of 29 studies, involving 19,052 students, met the inclusion criteria. The overall effect size, \( \overline{r} \) = −.24, was significant, p < .001. In subgroup analyses, the negative effect sizes were found to differ between secondary and post-secondary students, and boredom experienced in class had greater negative impact on students’ academic outcomes than boredom experienced while studying. In addition, a significant differential impact of boredom on academic motivation, study strategies and behaviors, and achievement was found. These findings suggest that education professionals should identify strategies to alleviate students’ boredom in academic settings.


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Notes
Given that the four studies did not provide sufficient information to compute a weighted average correlation for multiple outcomes and that we did not want to remove those studies because of small number of studies met inclusion criteria, a consistent simple averaging approach was therefore applied to obtain an average effect size for studies with multiple correlations.
References
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Tze, V.M.C., Daniels, L.M. & Klassen, R.M. Evaluating the Relationship Between Boredom and Academic Outcomes: A Meta-Analysis. Educ Psychol Rev 28, 119–144 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10648-015-9301-y
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10648-015-9301-y