Religious motivation, anger management style, and temperament of two groups of seminarians

This descriptive, comparative and correlation study was conducted among major seminarians in Metro Manila who were composed of two groups: the philosophers (n = 59) who were in the early stage of priestly formation and the theologians (n = 39) who were in the late stage of formation. It investigated...

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Main Author: Rajendram, Stalin G.
Format: text
Language:English
Published: Animo Repository 2001
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_masteral/2966
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Institution: De La Salle University
Language: English
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:etd_masteral-98042021-02-17T02:42:49Z Religious motivation, anger management style, and temperament of two groups of seminarians Rajendram, Stalin G. This descriptive, comparative and correlation study was conducted among major seminarians in Metro Manila who were composed of two groups: the philosophers (n = 59) who were in the early stage of priestly formation and the theologians (n = 39) who were in the late stage of formation. It investigated whether there was any significant difference between the two groups in terms of religious motivation and anger management style and if there was any correlation between religious motivation and the following three variables age, stages of formation, anger management style. The study showed that the theologians were significantly higher in the level of religious motivation than philosophers. No significant difference was noted in anger management style between the theologians and the philosophers. In terms of temperament, most of the philosophers and theologians were extroverted and Sensing Judging (SJ) individuals. All the four temperaments (sensing judging, sensing perceiving, intuitive feeling and intuitive thinking) had high-level religious motivation and there was no particular temperament that had high-level religious motivation. No correlation was found between religious motivation and anger management style however, there was positive correlation found among religious motivation, stages of formation and age. The findings have practical relevance for seminarians, formators, and counselors. 2001-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_masteral/2966 Master's Theses English Animo Repository Seminarians Religious motivations Temperament Anger Educational Psychology
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
language English
topic Seminarians
Religious motivations
Temperament
Anger
Educational Psychology
spellingShingle Seminarians
Religious motivations
Temperament
Anger
Educational Psychology
Rajendram, Stalin G.
Religious motivation, anger management style, and temperament of two groups of seminarians
description This descriptive, comparative and correlation study was conducted among major seminarians in Metro Manila who were composed of two groups: the philosophers (n = 59) who were in the early stage of priestly formation and the theologians (n = 39) who were in the late stage of formation. It investigated whether there was any significant difference between the two groups in terms of religious motivation and anger management style and if there was any correlation between religious motivation and the following three variables age, stages of formation, anger management style. The study showed that the theologians were significantly higher in the level of religious motivation than philosophers. No significant difference was noted in anger management style between the theologians and the philosophers. In terms of temperament, most of the philosophers and theologians were extroverted and Sensing Judging (SJ) individuals. All the four temperaments (sensing judging, sensing perceiving, intuitive feeling and intuitive thinking) had high-level religious motivation and there was no particular temperament that had high-level religious motivation. No correlation was found between religious motivation and anger management style however, there was positive correlation found among religious motivation, stages of formation and age. The findings have practical relevance for seminarians, formators, and counselors.
format text
author Rajendram, Stalin G.
author_facet Rajendram, Stalin G.
author_sort Rajendram, Stalin G.
title Religious motivation, anger management style, and temperament of two groups of seminarians
title_short Religious motivation, anger management style, and temperament of two groups of seminarians
title_full Religious motivation, anger management style, and temperament of two groups of seminarians
title_fullStr Religious motivation, anger management style, and temperament of two groups of seminarians
title_full_unstemmed Religious motivation, anger management style, and temperament of two groups of seminarians
title_sort religious motivation, anger management style, and temperament of two groups of seminarians
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2001
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_masteral/2966
_version_ 1712575091705905152