Pet Companionship for Learning and Academic Anxiety in Middle School Students: The Effect of Pet Attachment on Academic Anxiety

Authors

  • Yifei Zhu

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.54097/qtv93y69

Keywords:

Interviews; Pet attachment; Middle school students; Academic anxiety; Emotional support animals.

Abstract

With the increasing demands of the society on middle school students and the continuous reform of the examination system, middle school students are facing great learning pressure and challenges. As a result, academic anxiety has gradually become one of the common psychological problems among middle school students. Meanwhile, with the development of society, increasing families are willing to accept pets as one of their family members. This study investigated whether the attachment relationship between middle school students and their pets can alleviate their academic anxiety through a case study of middle school students with pet companionship. To this end, this study conducted semi-structured interviews among 6 middle school students aged 14 to 16, and analyzed the interview results to verify whether pet companionship can alleviate middle school students' academic anxiety. The study results show that pet companionship can have a significantly positive effect on reduced academic anxiety when middle school students face large-volume learning tasks, but this effect shows no significance when adolescents face difficult learning tasks. Limitations of pet companionship are also discussed.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Fu, X. L., & Zhang, K., Report on National Mental Health Development in China, (2021-2022). Social Sciences Literature Press, Beijing, 2023. 1.

Wu, Y. L. (2021). Adolescents’ Empathy for Humans and Animals: The Mediating and Moderating Role of Pet Attachment, (Master's thesis, Beijing Forestry University). https://kns.cnki.net/KCMS/detail/detail.aspx?dbname=CMFD202201&filename=1022455291.nh

Odendaal, J. S., & Meintjes, R. A. (2003). Neurophysiological correlates of affiliative behaviour between humans and dogs.The Veterinary Journal, 165(3), 296-301.

Brooks, H. L., Rushton, K., Lovell, K., Bee, P., Walker, L., Grant, L., & Rogers, A. (2018). The power of support from companion animals for people living with mental health problems: A systematic review and narrative synthesis of the evidence. BMC psychiatry, 18(1), 1-12.

Qiao, Y. L., (2010), Overview of Amphibious and Reptilian Pet Breeding in China, Aquarium (06), 160-162.

Shi, Y. J., (2022), Causes and Countermeasures of Adolescents’ Learning Anxiety, Mental Health Education in Primary and SecondarySchools (33), 60-62.

Jones, M. G., Rice, S. M., & Cotton, S. M. (2019). Incorporating animal-assisted therapy in mental health treatments for adolescents: A systematic review of canine assisted psychotherapy. PloS one, 14(1), e0210761.

He, W. M., Zou, S. J., Lai, H. Q., & Jiang, G. F., (2020). The animal presence effect: the physical and psychological impact of animal-assisted interventions on exceptional children, Mental Health Education in Primary and Secondary Schools (08), 39-44.

Chen, L. H., (2018). The Current Status, Influence Factors and Development Trends of China's Pet Industry. China Animal Health (08), 4-8.

Zhang, Y. D., & Jia, Q., (2021). Research on the Development of the Pet Industry in the New Era. Modern Business Trade Industry (30), 17-18. doi: 10.19311/j.cnki.1672-3198.2021.30.008.

Downloads

Published

31-12-2023

How to Cite

Zhu, Y. (2023). Pet Companionship for Learning and Academic Anxiety in Middle School Students: The Effect of Pet Attachment on Academic Anxiety. Journal of Education, Humanities and Social Sciences, 24, 199-203. https://doi.org/10.54097/qtv93y69