Journal of Meditation based Psychological Counseling (J Medit Psychol Couns)
Indexed in KCI
OPEN ACCESS, PEER REVIEWED
pISSN 2289-0823
eISSN 2671-6119
Research Article

The effect of socially prescribed perfectionism on dropout intention among university students: The moderated mediation effect of grit through academic burnout

Professor, Joongbu University, Republic of Korea

Correspondence to Kang, Yohan, E-mail: johnk@joongbu.ac.kr

Volume 36, Pages 139-150, April 2026.
Journal of Meditation Based Psychological Counseling 2026, 36, 139-150. https://doi.org/10.12972/mpca.2026.36.10
Received on March 09, 2026, Revised on April 23, 2026, Accepted on April 29, 2026, Published on April 30, 2026.
Copyright © 2026 Meditation based Psychological Counseling Association.
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0).

Abstract

This study examined the effect of socially prescribed perfectionism on dropout intention among university students through the mediating role of academic burnout and investigated the moderated mediation effect of grit in this relationship. A survey was conducted with university students to measure socially prescribed perfectionism, academic burnout, dropout intention, and grit. The collected data were analyzed using IBM SPSS Statistics 23 and the PROCESS macro. Descriptive statistics, reliability analysis, and correlation analysis were conducted, and PROCESS Macro Models 4 and 7 were applied to test the mediating effect of academic burnout and the moderated mediation effect of grit.
The results showed that socially prescribed perfectionism was positively correlated with academic burnout and dropout intention, whereas grit was negatively correlated with these variables. Academic burnout mediated the relationship between socially prescribed perfectionism and dropout intention. In addition, grit moderated the relationship between socially prescribed perfectionism and academic burnout, and the indirect effect of socially prescribed perfectionism on dropout intention through academic burnout varied depending on the level of grit, indicating a significant moderated mediation effect.
These findings suggest that academic burnout plays an important mediating role in the relationship between socially prescribed perfectionism and dropout intention among university students. Furthermore, grit, typically considered a positive personal trait, may intensify psychological burden under certain conditions. This study provides implications for understanding university students’ academic adjustment and offers basic data for developing psychological interventions to prevent academic burnout and support academic persistence.
Keywords

socially prescribed perfectionism, academic burnout, dropout intention, grit, moderated mediation effect

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