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Systematic Review of Academic Procrastination Interventions in Computing Higher Education

Daniel Cheng, Oscar Heath, Daniyaal Farooqi, Evelyn Chou, Alice Gao, Jonathan Calver

Abstract

Academic procrastination is a persistent challenge in computing education, yet evidence on the effectiveness of course-level interventions remains fragmented across diverse designs and contexts. We present a systematic literature review of studies published in the past decade that empirically examine interventions to reduce academic procrastination among post-secondary computing students. Evidence from 19 articles examines interventions that target procrastination through structural, feedback-based, motivational, and self-regulatory mechanisms. Our findings suggest that interventions introducing clear temporal structure consistently promote earlier starts and more distributed work, which act as key mediators of performance gains. The magnitude of these gains depends strongly on task structure, with greater benefits for long-horizon, multi-step assignments than for short, routine tasks. Moreover, supportive designs reliably outperform punitive or restrictive schemes, while uniform interventions yield uneven benefits across students. This review highlights the importance of designing structured, supportive, and personalized interventions to address procrastination in computing education.

Systematic Review of Academic Procrastination Interventions in Computing Higher Education

Abstract

Academic procrastination is a persistent challenge in computing education, yet evidence on the effectiveness of course-level interventions remains fragmented across diverse designs and contexts. We present a systematic literature review of studies published in the past decade that empirically examine interventions to reduce academic procrastination among post-secondary computing students. Evidence from 19 articles examines interventions that target procrastination through structural, feedback-based, motivational, and self-regulatory mechanisms. Our findings suggest that interventions introducing clear temporal structure consistently promote earlier starts and more distributed work, which act as key mediators of performance gains. The magnitude of these gains depends strongly on task structure, with greater benefits for long-horizon, multi-step assignments than for short, routine tasks. Moreover, supportive designs reliably outperform punitive or restrictive schemes, while uniform interventions yield uneven benefits across students. This review highlights the importance of designing structured, supportive, and personalized interventions to address procrastination in computing education.

Paper Structure

This paper contains 12 sections, 1 figure, 1 table.

Figures (1)

  • Figure 1: PRISMA diagram: paper selection procedure