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Relationship between online-learning self-efficacy and risk for psychological distress and harmful substance use in South African university students

The COVID-19 pandemic brought about rapid emergency changes in learning formats at universities globally, with a mass migration to online learning. Students' level of online learning self-efficacy (OLSE) may be an important determinant of how they cope with these changes. This study explored whether...

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Main Author: Henning, Tiffany Joy
Other Authors: Kaminer, Debra
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Psychology 2023
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access_status_str Open Access
author Henning, Tiffany Joy
author2 Kaminer, Debra
author_browse Henning, Tiffany Joy
Kaminer, Debra
author_facet Kaminer, Debra
Henning, Tiffany Joy
author_sort Henning, Tiffany Joy
collection Thesis
description The COVID-19 pandemic brought about rapid emergency changes in learning formats at universities globally, with a mass migration to online learning. Students' level of online learning self-efficacy (OLSE) may be an important determinant of how they cope with these changes. This study explored whether sociodemographic and online learning context factors are associated with OLSE among South African university students, whether OLSE predicts psychological distress and harmful substance use, and whether level of perceived social support moderates these relationships. It also examined whether psychological distress mediates the relationship between OLSE and problematic substance use. A cross-sectional online survey was administered to students from the University of Cape Town (n = 627). Students who had higher levels of access to online learning resources, and students who were white had higher levels of OLSE, while students on a government bursary and those living in university residences rather than with family members had lower OLSE. Lower OLSE was found to be a significant predictor of higher psychological distress and increased harmful substance use, when controlling for sociodemographic and online learning context factors. Psychological distress mediated the relationships between OLSE and harmful alcohol and marijuana use. Perceived social support did not moderate the relationships between OLSE and mental health difficulties or substance use. These findings indicate that OLSE is an important predictor of how university students cope with online learning demands and suggest that students with lower OLSE should be identified and better supported with strategies to improve their OLSE levels. Further, students with lower OLSE levels may need greater mental health support from universities within the context of online learning, as the existing social supports do not appear to be adequately protective for students.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:51.607Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
publishDateSort 2023
publisher Department of Psychology
publisherStr Department of Psychology
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/36936 Relationship between online-learning self-efficacy and risk for psychological distress and harmful substance use in South African university students Henning, Tiffany Joy Kaminer, Debra Online learning self-efficacy psychological distress alcohol marijuana social support The COVID-19 pandemic brought about rapid emergency changes in learning formats at universities globally, with a mass migration to online learning. Students' level of online learning self-efficacy (OLSE) may be an important determinant of how they cope with these changes. This study explored whether sociodemographic and online learning context factors are associated with OLSE among South African university students, whether OLSE predicts psychological distress and harmful substance use, and whether level of perceived social support moderates these relationships. It also examined whether psychological distress mediates the relationship between OLSE and problematic substance use. A cross-sectional online survey was administered to students from the University of Cape Town (n = 627). Students who had higher levels of access to online learning resources, and students who were white had higher levels of OLSE, while students on a government bursary and those living in university residences rather than with family members had lower OLSE. Lower OLSE was found to be a significant predictor of higher psychological distress and increased harmful substance use, when controlling for sociodemographic and online learning context factors. Psychological distress mediated the relationships between OLSE and harmful alcohol and marijuana use. Perceived social support did not moderate the relationships between OLSE and mental health difficulties or substance use. These findings indicate that OLSE is an important predictor of how university students cope with online learning demands and suggest that students with lower OLSE should be identified and better supported with strategies to improve their OLSE levels. Further, students with lower OLSE levels may need greater mental health support from universities within the context of online learning, as the existing social supports do not appear to be adequately protective for students. 2023-02-21T13:27:23Z 2023-02-21T13:27:23Z 2022 2023-01-11T11:27:36Z Master Thesis Masters MA http://hdl.handle.net/11427/36936 eng application/pdf Department of Psychology Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Online learning self-efficacy
psychological distress
alcohol
marijuana
social support
Henning, Tiffany Joy
Relationship between online-learning self-efficacy and risk for psychological distress and harmful substance use in South African university students
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Relationship between online-learning self-efficacy and risk for psychological distress and harmful substance use in South African university students
title_full Relationship between online-learning self-efficacy and risk for psychological distress and harmful substance use in South African university students
title_fullStr Relationship between online-learning self-efficacy and risk for psychological distress and harmful substance use in South African university students
title_full_unstemmed Relationship between online-learning self-efficacy and risk for psychological distress and harmful substance use in South African university students
title_short Relationship between online-learning self-efficacy and risk for psychological distress and harmful substance use in South African university students
title_sort relationship between online learning self efficacy and risk for psychological distress and harmful substance use in south african university students
topic Online learning self-efficacy
psychological distress
alcohol
marijuana
social support
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/36936
work_keys_str_mv AT henningtiffanyjoy relationshipbetweenonlinelearningselfefficacyandriskforpsychologicaldistressandharmfulsubstanceuseinsouthafricanuniversitystudents