Abstract
During scholastic or physical performance testing, individuals who
fear failure tend to focus on their fears instead of the task and often perform
poorly. This study examined the relationship between fear-of-failure (FoF) and
performance among 200~students (male=140, female
=60) attending Health Care Specialist Advanced Individual
Training (AIT) at Ft. Sam Houston. Performance measures included grade point
average, pass/fail status, Army Physical Fitness Test scores, and number of
musculoskeletal injuries. Pearson Product Moment Correlations revealed that
Soldiers who scored higher on a FoF scale also had higher final grades
(r=0.16, p=0.02, r
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