Title of article
Relations of academic and general self-esteem to school achievement
Author/Authors
Helle Pullmann، نويسنده , , Jüri Allik، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
6
From page
559
To page
564
Abstract
The study demonstrates on a nationally representative sample of Estonian students and university applicants (N = 4572) that although self-reported academic self-esteem is a strong and accurate predictor of school achievement, additionally rather low, not high, general self-esteem is a significant predictor of superior school performance when academic self-esteem and multicollinearity is controlled for. Two compensatory mechanisms—defensive pessimism and self-protective enhancement—may explain the paradox of low self-esteem: academically successful students have a more critical view of themselves and students with more modest academic abilities compensate for their academic under-achievement by elevating their general self-esteem. Children start to use self-protective enhancement but from age 12 to 14 they also start using defensive pessimism to protect themselves from the consequences of failure.
Keywords
General self-esteemAcademic self-esteemHierarchical self-conceptAcademic achievementDefensive pessimismSelf-protective enhancement
Journal title
Personality and Individual Differences
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
Personality and Individual Differences
Record number
458749
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