Share.

8 Kommentare

  1. Longitudinal study finds procrastination declines with age but still shapes major life outcomes over nearly two decades

    An 18-year-long study published in Journal of Personality & Social Psychology finds that people tend to procrastinate less as they move through young adulthood.

    Research on procrastination has mostly focused on short-term behavior, largely in academic settings and over relatively brief periods. These studies have been useful for identifying what leads people to delay tasks and the immediate consequences for performance and well-being, but they don’t say much about whether procrastination changes across longer stretches of life, or whether it stays fairly constant as people grow older.

    For those interested, here’s the link to the peer reviewed journal article:

    https://psycnet.apa.org/doiLanding?doi=10.1037%2Fpspp0000591

  2. Wonder if that is just responsibilities. I am single and childless and procrastinate more in my 30s… less zest for life so it is harder to do things I can’t be bothered with

  3. Im the exception that confirms the rules.

    Its harder and harder to not procrastinate as i approach midlife. Suddenly im aware of the rat race and no longer interested in taking part if it. But bills and dreams need money, so…

  4. gordonpamsey on

    How many hard dates are you actually getting in adult life akin to what happens in a school setting to begin with?

  5. Fluid_Complaint_1821 on

    I was a big procrastinator all through highschool and college, I’m 38 now and feel like I have the opposite problem of procrastination.

    EDIT: I shouldn’t say problem, neither procrastination or precrastination have ever really caused me problems, I did fine as a procrastinator, I do a little better as a precrastinator.

  6. Productivity10 on

    This is dumb because school and university life is very different than after you finish it

Leave A Reply