i and others have shown that your views on procrastination are completely wrong when it comes to our situations. the only thing that i claim to know is that you have no idea what you are talking about. people like you are so annoying. you try very hard to appear intelligent and the only people you might convince are people who don't know any better. what you don't realize is that most people can see through your charade and you just look like a ridiculous, pompous fake. i never claimed to be an expert on procrastination, but i have seen you confidently make false declarations enough on other subjects to know that you aren't a very knowledgeable person.
i bet you were expecting me to just ignore the link you sent and not look for it. i tried to look for it but couldn't download it. why don't you send me the direct article since i couldn't find it without spending 40 dollars. After reading the abstract i am even more convinced you have no idea what you are talking about and make these references just for show, hoping that nobody follows up and reads the article. here is the abstract for the paper you cited:
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all the reviews i read about the article talks specifically about the effects of procrastination on writing and talks nothing about the horse crap you were blabbing on about before. of course i don't have the full article but if you could send it to me i would be more than happy to read it. the way you talk about this article as if it is some esoteric work of genius makes you look like a complete fool. stop being such a poser.
I acknowledge again your persistent insults just to give you some semblance of control over your ignorance. Why do you resort to personal attacks instead of addressing the topic? Hmm... because you have no argument. (Nor knowledge for that matter. Nor necessary skillz to do your homework.)
See, here's the thing:
you think you're stupid and un-intelligent. This is a strong factor in procrastinatory behavior. And guess what: the stupid and un-intelligent have lower skills than the average person. Hence your procrastination. I'll educate you further: you believe that intelligence is innate, that you are born smart, stupid, or somewhere in between. (Where do you belong on this spectrum?) But you are not alone. The most recent study indicates that 90% of the population believes this innate view of intelligence. The remaining 10%, though, are the ones who become very successful in school, work, and in life (including relationships.) Why? Because they believe they have control over their lives that they are not stuck with what they were born with. They believe they can become more talented, skilled, smart and intelligent by taking the time and effort to learn. You, 90%, are more concerned with hiding your own stupidity. 10% are concerned with learning to improve the areas they are deficient.
The article I accessed when I studied procrastination at my university. I no longer have access to the article but I did print it out for my own use.
Selected quotes from the aforementioned article:
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Introduction Procrastination is viewed as "the act of needlessly delaying tasks to the point of experiencing subjective discomfort." ... For college students particularly, academic procrastination has been associated with depression, guilt, low grades, anxiety, neuroticism, irrational thinking, cheating, and low self-esteem.
More students reported that they procrastination on writing papers than on any other academic activity. ... When procrastination precludes the possibility of revision, the consequences may extend beyond the assignment grade. US students, for example, are widely perceived to be deficient in writing skills, and many college graduates must accept low-level jobs as a result of this deficiency.
Discussion Receipt of feedback on writing was associated with better writing outcomes for high procrastinators.
Although high procrastinators were less likely to seek feedback, some of them did seek it, and their receipt of feedback was associated with better outcomes. [The reason high procrastinators did not seek feedback is, as I mentioned earlier, because they do not want others to know that they are stupid and un-intelligent..]
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So here are the pertinent points of this ONE article. Expertise is partly developed by reading dozens upon dozens of articles. You won't know just how far this behavior has been studied, how many nooks and crannies these few researchers have delved and come up with nothing in pursuit of this goal.
You are obviously not a college student so you have very little experience with writing an academic paper. But when you do write one, (remember that I stated that procrastinators have neither the skills nor knowledge to do the task), you need to read until you do have the necessary knowledge. You may have the skills the write but if you don't have the knowledge of what you're writing about...