Abstract
Background: In modern society, increased awareness of stress stems mainly from the pressures of competitive environments, where the pursuit of academic and professional success places substantial demands on individuals, who must adapt. Drawing on the Transactional Model and the Interactive Model of Human Adaptation to Stress, this paper presents a battery of instruments designed to comprehensively assess university students’ adaptation to stress. Methods: Data were collected from two academic years, using two independent samples of students: a calibration sample (n = 561) and a validation sample (n = 370) to test the psychometric properties of the instruments. The evaluation protocol included the Stress Questionnaire for Students (SQS), the Primary and Secondary Cognitive Appraisal Scale (PSCAS), the Reduced Coping Inventory (Coping-R), and the Academic Achievement Expectations (AAE). Results: Psychometric validation analyses indicated the best versions of the instruments’ battery. Namely, an 18-item version and a six-factor structure for the SQS, a 10-item version and a five-factor structure for the PSCAS, a 12-item version and a four-factor structure for the Coping-R, and a five-item, one-factor structure for the AAE. Conclusions: The proposed instruments can serve as a compound resource for screening for academic stress experiences in university students, and as an original tool to understand the entire process of stress adaptation.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 49 |
| Number of pages | 29 |
| Journal | Epidemiologia |
| Volume | 7 |
| Issue number | 2 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - Apr 2026 |
Keywords
- Academic stress
- Cognitive appraisal
- Coping
- Academic achievement expectations
- Higher education students
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Dive into the research topics of 'Evaluating how university students adapt to stress: psychometric validation of a psychological instruments battery'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Projects
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CEDH 2025-2029: CEDH - Research Centre for Human Development: UID/04872/2025. Pluriannual 2025-2029
Mesquita, D. (Project Coordinator)
1/01/25 → 31/12/29
Project: Research
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