Drawing on study demands-resources and key psychological resource theories, this study aims to investigate a multilevel model in which, at level 1, students’ study crafting positively affects their learning performance and, at level 2, instructors’ mindfulness moderates the relationship between students’ study crafting and learning performance.
A sample of 2006 business students nested within 68 classes (instructors) at universities in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, was interviewed to collect data using a partial self-administered survey.
The findings produced by the SPSS linear mixed models demonstrated that students’ study crafting had a positive effect on their learning performance. In addition, instructors’ mindfulness moderated the effect of students’ study crafting on learning performance.
Universities should encourage and foster students’ study crafting and instructors’ mindfulness to enhance students’ learning performance.
This study is among the first to contribute to the business education literature by elucidating the combination of students’ personal and social resources (students’ study crafting and instructors’ mindfulness) to improve their learning performance.
