The imposter phenomenon and its relationship with self-efficacy, perfectionism and happiness in university students
Abstract
Individuals who experience the imposter phenomenon (IP) have feelings of self-doubt and are concerned that they will be exposed as frauds. Previous research has indicated that IP is associated with anxiety, depression and low self-esteem, and university students are thought to be particularly susceptible to IP. This study investigated the relationship between IP and self-efficacy, maladaptive perfectionism and happiness in university students, and examined whether these variables differ between females and males. The study also examined whether IP was associated with belonging and perceived levels of academic competition. Participants (N = 261) completed the Clance Imposter Phenomenon Scale (CIPS), New General Self-Efficacy (NGSE), Big Three Perfectionism Scale – Short Form (BTPS-SF), Oxford Happiness Questionnaire (OHQ), plus measures of belonging and perceived competition. As predicted, CIPS scores correlated negatively with NGSE and OHQ and positively with BTPS-SF in both sexes. Females scored higher, on average, than males on CIPS and BTPS-SF, and the gender difference in CIPS remained after indirect effects of perfectionism were removed. Neither belonging nor competition correlated with CIPS scores. The negative relationship between perfectionism and happiness was fully mediated by imposterism, which suggests that designing interventions that reduce IP could positively enhance student wellbeing.
Citation
Pakozdy , C , Askew , J , Dyer , J , Gately , P , Martin , L , Mavor , K & Brown , G R 2023 , ' The imposter phenomenon and its relationship with self-efficacy, perfectionism and happiness in university students ' , Current Psychology , vol. First Online . https://doi.org/10.1007/s12144-023-04672-4
Publication
Current Psychology
Status
Peer reviewed
ISSN
1046-1310Type
Journal article
Description
Funding: The study was funded by the University of St Andrews, UK.Collections
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