Exploring the Psychological Well-Being of Flight Cadets through a Comprehensive Survey Analysis of Self-Awareness and Self-Acceptance
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Original Scales
2.3. Statistical Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Scale Optimization
3.1.1. Item Analysis
3.1.2. Reliability Analysis
3.1.3. Validity Analysis
3.2. Scale Survey Results
3.2.1. Characteristics of the Participants
3.2.2. Self-Awareness Level
3.2.3. Self-Acceptance Level
4. Discussion
4.1. Evaluation of Self-Awareness and Self-Acceptance Status
- (1)
- The self-awareness and self-acceptance levels of the pilot students are typically normal and stable, presenting challenges in directly identifying positive symptoms. As illustrated in Figure 8, the mean and median scores for each factor are above 3.5, with the interquartile range (IQR) falling between 0.5 and 1. This indicates that the majority of flight cadets exhibit a strong level of self-awareness and -acceptance. However, some flight cadets display moderate symptoms for each factor, and in the case of academic self-awareness (see Figure 4 and Figure 7), even severe symptoms, which could potentially impact their daily life and training performance.
- (2)
- The self-awareness and self-acceptance statuses of flight cadets differ across various aviation school locations. Pilot students trained abroad demonstrated poorer overall self-awareness and -acceptance levels compared to domestically trained cadets, as evidenced by lower scores and a higher prevalence of positive symptoms. Currently, both domestic and foreign aviation schools’ training systems are relatively well-established, as inferred from the variations in national circumstances and cadets’ adaptability to foreign environments. Language barriers also play a significant role that cannot be overlooked. Moreover, the COVID-19 pandemic has significantly impacted the training of flight cadets. Interviews with pilot students revealed that most domestic aviation schools have paid more attention to students’ mental health during the pandemic, whereas most foreign aviation schools have not prioritized this aspect. Consequently, disparities in training environments may influence the mental health status of flight cadets, thereby affecting their self-awareness and -acceptance levels.
- (3)
- The self-awareness and -acceptance levels of flight cadets do not significantly differ based on their grades, a result contrary to initial expectations. Previous studies have shown that for flight cadets in training, the acquisition of theoretical knowledge and flight training hours can greatly enhance their personal development. Enhanced proficiency in their work can boost their enthusiasm and improve their mental health, ultimately positively influencing their self-awareness and -acceptance status. Based on interviews with several participants, it has been revealed that the COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted the flight training schedules of Class of 2018 flight cadets. As a result, students were faced with the pressure of training delay, theory exam expiration, graduation delay, and so on. It can be inferred that these factors may impact the self-awareness and -acceptance level of flight cadets, potentially leading to a lower-than-expected level of performance among Class of 2018 flight cadets.
4.2. Management Measures for Self-Awareness and Self-Acceptance
4.3. Limitations and Future Research
5. Conclusions
- (1)
- The original scales underwent optimization, with three items removed from the original self-awareness scale, while the self-acceptance scale remained unchanged. Both obtained scales demonstrated an acceptable level of reliability and validity.
- (2)
- The overall self-awareness and -acceptance levels among flight cadets appeared to be within the normal range; however, the direct detection of positive symptoms proved challenging. The tested flight cadets exhibited moderate symptoms across each factor, with instances of severe symptoms in academic self-awareness.
- (3)
- The self-awareness and -acceptance levels of flight cadets differed among various aviation school locations, with those trained abroad exhibiting inferior performance compared to their domestic counterparts. Interestingly, this phenomenon was not reflected in grade difference.
Author Contributions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Scales | Items | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
1. Self-awareness | Q1. I have a clear understanding of my learning status. | |||||
Q2. I readily accept new theoretical knowledge. | ||||||
Q3. I excel at applying theoretical knowledge learned to practical flying. | ||||||
Q4. I frequently review newly acquired theoretical knowledge. | ||||||
Q5. My physical health is excellent. | ||||||
Q6. I pay close attention to my physical health condition. | ||||||
Q7. I can perceive the aircraft’s status during flight with my body. | ||||||
Q8. I do not experience any discomforting physical reactions during flight. | ||||||
Q9. I dare to confront health issues and never hide or evade them. | ||||||
Q10. I believe my physical condition is suitable for flying. | ||||||
Q11. I am not adept at handling interpersonal relationships, and my relationships with people around me (family, instructors, classmates) are poor. | ||||||
Q12. People around me (family, instructors, classmates) are indifferent and show little concern towards me. | ||||||
Q13. I do not derive any satisfaction from my group. | ||||||
Q14. When facing difficulties, I do not seek help from anyone. | ||||||
Q15. No one offers assistance when I encounter issues during my flight. | ||||||
Q16. I play no role in the team and am dispensable. | ||||||
Q17. I have good emotional management. | ||||||
Q18. I remain calm during flights, without feeling nervous or excited. | ||||||
Q19. I feel anxious if the progress of the flight is slowed down by certain factors. | ||||||
Q20. I humbly accept criticism from teachers and instructors without feeling irritated. | ||||||
Q21. I remain calm when facing problems during flight that I cannot solve on my own and never lose control. | ||||||
Q22. I am sensitive to changes in my emotions. | ||||||
Q23. My psychological resilience is strong. | ||||||
Q24. I have confidence in my flying skills and do not doubt myself. | ||||||
Q25. I feel afraid and powerless when flying. | ||||||
Q26. I do not dwell on my mistakes and can move forward. | ||||||
Q27. I believe I can determine my own destiny. | ||||||
2. Self-acceptance | Q1. I have a clear understanding of my role as a flight cadet. | |||||
Q2. I am clear about my goals and responsibilities. | ||||||
Q3. I am very confident in my flying skills. | ||||||
Q4. I feel satisfied when playing my role in the team. | ||||||
Q5. I appreciate the various characteristics I possess. | ||||||
Q6. I am satisfied with myself when I make progress compared to the previous stage. | ||||||
Q7. I am satisfied that I can always overcome various difficulties. | ||||||
Q8. When praised or appreciated by others, I am satisfied with myself. | ||||||
Q9. I feel satisfied with my body and appearance. | ||||||
Q10. I can see my own worth in life. | ||||||
Q11. I am satisfied with my learning ability. | ||||||
Q12. I feel that my communication skills are strong. | ||||||
Q13. I acknowledge that I have some flaws and shortcomings. | ||||||
Q14. I acknowledge the mistakes I make in flying and never hide them. | ||||||
Q15. I do not give up on myself when I feel inadequate. | ||||||
Q16. I appreciate it when others give me advice and point out my weaknesses. | ||||||
Q17. I acknowledge that I sometimes have unhealthy thoughts. | ||||||
Q18. I am not worried that others will reject me because of my flaws. | ||||||
Q19. I accept that sometimes my low efficiency at work may affect others. | ||||||
Q20. I am willing to show my flaws to others. | ||||||
Q21. I am willing to admit to the mistakes I have made. | ||||||
Q22. I accept that my body and appearance are not perfect. | ||||||
Q23. I am never worried about receiving criticism or correction from others. | ||||||
Q24. I do not deny myself because of some failures and mistakes. |
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Scales | Items | T | p |
---|---|---|---|
1. Self-awareness | Q1 | 6.454 | 0.000 ** |
Q2 | 6.494 | 0.000 ** | |
Q3 | 8.714 | 0.000 ** | |
Q4 | 6.278 | 0.000 ** | |
Q5 | 1.542 | 0.129 | |
Q6 | 1.121 | 0.267 | |
Q7 | 6.069 | 0.000 ** | |
Q8 | 5.381 | 0.000 ** | |
Q9 | 5.135 | 0.000 ** | |
Q10 | 6.022 | 0.000 ** | |
Q11 | 8.187 | 0.000 ** | |
Q12 | 8.448 | 0.000 ** | |
Q13 | 6.424 | 0.000 ** | |
Q14 | 3.249 | 0.002 ** | |
Q15 | 6.228 | 0.000 ** | |
Q16 | 3.251 | 0.002 ** | |
Q17 | 3.200 | 0.002 ** | |
Q18 | 5.461 | 0.000 ** | |
Q19 | 9.042 | 0.000 ** | |
Q20 | 7.139 | 0.000 ** | |
Q21 | 5.178 | 0.000 ** | |
Q22 | 7.036 | 0.000 ** | |
Q23 | 9.264 | 0.000 ** | |
Q24 | 5.552 | 0.000 ** | |
Q25 | 11.703 | 0.000 ** | |
Q26 | 0.658 | 0.513 | |
Q27 | 12.561 | 0.000 ** | |
Q28 | 3.833 | 0.000 ** | |
Q29 | 9.999 | 0.000 ** | |
Q30 | 9.205 | 0.000 ** | |
2. Self-acceptance | Q1 | 4.978 | 0.000 ** |
Q2 | 5.925 | 0.000 ** | |
Q3 | 7.128 | 0.000 ** | |
Q4 | 8.322 | 0.000 ** | |
Q5 | 6.935 | 0.000 ** | |
Q6 | 8.079 | 0.000 ** | |
Q7 | 9.554 | 0.000 ** | |
Q8 | 4.727 | 0.000 ** | |
Q9 | 5.464 | 0.000 ** | |
Q10 | 8.397 | 0.000 ** | |
Q11 | 9.965 | 0.000 ** | |
Q12 | 10.386 | 0.000 ** | |
Q13 | 5.093 | 0.000 ** | |
Q14 | 5.461 | 0.000 ** | |
Q15 | 6.786 | 0.000 ** | |
Q16 | 5.487 | 0.000 ** | |
Q17 | 3.643 | 0.000 ** | |
Q18 | 6.975 | 0.000 ** | |
Q19 | 7.238 | 0.000 ** | |
Q20 | 8.072 | 0.000 ** | |
Q21 | 8.889 | 0.000 ** | |
Q22 | 7.731 | 0.000 ** | |
Q23 | 7.601 | 0.000 ** | |
Q24 | 6.278 | 0.000 ** |
Scales | Items | Item-Dimension Correlations | Item-Total Correlations |
---|---|---|---|
1. Self-awareness | Q1 | 0.857 ** | 0.582 ** |
Q2 | 0.911 ** | 0.626 ** | |
Q3 | 0.844 ** | 0.721 ** | |
Q4 | 0.841 ** | 0.573 ** | |
Q7 | 0.764 ** | 0.628 ** | |
Q8 | 0.788 ** | 0.591 ** | |
Q9 | 0.798 ** | 0.584 ** | |
Q10 | 0.799 ** | 0.613 ** | |
Q11 | 0.851 ** | 0.674 ** | |
Q12 | 0.856 ** | 0.712 ** | |
Q13 | 0.649 ** | 0.518 ** | |
Q14 | 0.533 ** | 0.324 ** | |
Q15 | 0.783 ** | 0.527 ** | |
Q16 | 0.670 ** | 0.424 ** | |
Q17 | 0.674 ** | 0.398 ** | |
Q18 | 0.687 ** | 0.541 ** | |
Q19 | 0.730 ** | 0.648 ** | |
Q20 | 0.710 ** | 0.597 ** | |
Q21 | 0.622 ** | 0.477 ** | |
Q22 | 0.699 ** | 0.580 ** | |
Q23 | 0.756 ** | 0.707 ** | |
Q24 | 0.720 ** | 0.537 ** | |
Q25 | 0.833 ** | 0.780 ** | |
Q27 | 0.841 ** | 0.731 ** | |
Q28 | 0.501 ** | 0.326 ** | |
Q29 | 0.773 ** | 0.677 ** | |
Q30 | 0.790 ** | 0.644 ** | |
2. Self-acceptance | Q1 | 0.770 ** | 0.720 ** |
Q2 | 0.763 ** | 0.715 ** | |
Q3 | 0.825 ** | 0.766 ** | |
Q4 | 0.823 ** | 0.802 ** | |
Q5 | 0.831 ** | 0.801 ** | |
Q6 | 0.812 ** | 0.758 ** | |
Q7 | 0.794 ** | 0.787 ** | |
Q8 | 0.647 ** | 0.631 ** | |
Q9 | 0.738 ** | 0.720 ** | |
Q10 | 0.716 ** | 0.736 ** | |
Q11 | 0.742 ** | 0.718 ** | |
Q12 | 0.737 ** | 0.724 ** | |
Q13 | 0.554 ** | 0.568 ** | |
Q14 | 0.649 ** | 0.665 ** | |
Q15 | 0.717 ** | 0.711 ** | |
Q16 | 0.715 ** | 0.663 ** | |
Q17 | 0.483 ** | 0.428 ** | |
Q18 | 0.714 ** | 0.673 ** | |
Q19 | 0.687 ** | 0.594 ** | |
Q20 | 0.687 ** | 0.658 ** | |
Q21 | 0.808 ** | 0.774 ** | |
Q22 | 0.762 ** | 0.717 ** | |
Q23 | 0.747 ** | 0.740 ** | |
Q24 | 0.726 ** | 0.726 ** |
Scales | Dimensions | Number of Items | Cronbach’s Alpha |
---|---|---|---|
1. Self-awareness | Academic | 4 | 0.879 |
Physical | 6 | 0.892 | |
Social | 6 | 0.753 | |
Emotional | 6 | 0.795 | |
Psychological | 5 | 0.815 | |
Total scale | 27 | 0.926 | |
2. Self-acceptance | Active | 12 | 0.936 |
Passive | 12 | 0.896 | |
Total scale | 24 | 0.954 |
Scales | Items | Dimensions | Estimate | AVE | CR |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. Self-awareness | Q1 | Academic | 0.802 | 0.6720 | 0.8906 |
Q2 | Academic | 0.918 | |||
Q3 | Academic | 0.818 | |||
Q4 | Academic | 0.730 | |||
Q7 | Physical | 0.680 | 0.5876 | 0.8942 | |
Q8 | Physical | 0.690 | |||
Q9 | Physical | 0.722 | |||
Q10 | Physical | 0.737 | |||
Q11 | Physical | 0.865 | |||
Q12 | Physical | 0.880 | |||
Q13 | Social | 0.610 | 0.3465 | 0.7559 | |
Q14 | Social | 0.411 | |||
Q15 | Social | 0.735 | |||
Q16 | Social | 0.582 | |||
Q17 | Social | 0.549 | |||
Q18 | Social | 0.598 | |||
Q19 | Emotional | 0.752 | 0.4016 | 0.7965 | |
Q20 | Emotional | 0.636 | |||
Q21 | Emotional | 0.457 | |||
Q22 | Emotional | 0.573 | |||
Q23 | Emotional | 0.757 | |||
Q24 | Emotional | 0.574 | |||
Q25 | Psychological | 0.851 | 0.4770 | 0.8101 | |
Q27 | Psychological | 0.778 | |||
Q28 | Psychological | 0.340 | |||
Q29 | Psychological | 0.690 | |||
Q30 | Psychological | 0.681 | |||
2. Self-acceptance | Q1 | Active | 0.754 | 0.5562 | 0.9373 |
Q2 | Active | 0.742 | |||
Q3 | Active | 0.799 | |||
Q4 | Active | 0.814 | |||
Q5 | Active | 0.816 | |||
Q6 | Active | 0.788 | |||
Q7 | Active | 0.793 | |||
Q8 | Active | 0.616 | |||
Q9 | Active | 0.693 | |||
Q10 | Active | 0.708 | |||
Q11 | Active | 0.697 | |||
Q12 | Active | 0.701 | |||
Q13 | Passive | 0.516 | 0.4390 | 0.9012 | |
Q14 | Passive | 0.651 | |||
Q15 | Passive | 0.707 | |||
Q16 | Passive | 0.672 | |||
Q17 | Passive | 0.367 | |||
Q18 | Passive | 0.675 | |||
Q19 | Passive | 0.584 | |||
Q20 | Passive | 0.649 | |||
Q21 | Passive | 0.798 | |||
Q22 | Passive | 0.730 | |||
Q23 | Passive | 0.742 | |||
Q24 | Passive | 0.744 |
Model/Threshold | CMIN/df | CFI | FII | TLI | RMSEA |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Self-awareness model | 1.446 | 0.894 | 0.897 | 0.882 | 0.066 |
Self-acceptance model | 1.866 | 0.857 | 0.860 | 0.843 | 0.093 |
Threshold [35,36] | <3 good; <5 sometimes permissible | >0.95 great; >0.90 traditional; >0.80 sometimes permissible | >0.95 great; >0.90 traditional; >0.80 sometimes permissible | >0.95 great; >0.90 traditional; >0.80 sometimes permissible | <0.05 good; 0.05–0.10 moderate; >0.10 bad |
Characteristic | Description |
---|---|
Total number of subjects (valid) | 102 |
Gender | Male (100%) |
Class | Class of 2018 (50%); Class of 2019 (50%) |
Flight training location | In domestic (50%); Abroad (50%) |
Scales | Variable | Estimate | p-Value |
---|---|---|---|
1. Self-awareness | Constant | −0.003 | 0.993 |
Academic | 0.113 | 0.060 | |
Physical | 0.178 | 0.039 * | |
Social | 0.191 | 0.066 | |
Emotional | 0.526 | <0.001 ** | |
2. Self-acceptance | Constant | 0.246 | 0.179 |
Passive | 0.059 | <0.001 ** |
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Share and Cite
Miao, D.; Cao, X.; Zhao, B.; Shi, Y.; Shi, Y. Exploring the Psychological Well-Being of Flight Cadets through a Comprehensive Survey Analysis of Self-Awareness and Self-Acceptance. Aerospace 2024, 11, 441. https://doi.org/10.3390/aerospace11060441
Miao D, Cao X, Zhao B, Shi Y, Shi Y. Exploring the Psychological Well-Being of Flight Cadets through a Comprehensive Survey Analysis of Self-Awareness and Self-Acceptance. Aerospace. 2024; 11(6):441. https://doi.org/10.3390/aerospace11060441
Chicago/Turabian StyleMiao, Dan, Xiaodong Cao, Bingxu Zhao, Yuan Shi, and Yunze Shi. 2024. "Exploring the Psychological Well-Being of Flight Cadets through a Comprehensive Survey Analysis of Self-Awareness and Self-Acceptance" Aerospace 11, no. 6: 441. https://doi.org/10.3390/aerospace11060441
APA StyleMiao, D., Cao, X., Zhao, B., Shi, Y., & Shi, Y. (2024). Exploring the Psychological Well-Being of Flight Cadets through a Comprehensive Survey Analysis of Self-Awareness and Self-Acceptance. Aerospace, 11(6), 441. https://doi.org/10.3390/aerospace11060441