Title of article
Attributional Retraining, Self-Esteem, and the Job Interview: Benefits and Risks for College Student Employment
Author/Authors
Nathan C. Hall، نويسنده , , Shannan E. Jackson Gradt، نويسنده , , Thomas Goetz & Lauren E. Musu-Gillette ، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages
22
From page
318
To page
339
Abstract
The present study evaluated the effectiveness of an attributional retraining program for helping upper-level undergraduates perform better in employment interviews as moderated by self-esteem levels. The sample consisted of 50 co-operative education students preparing for actual job interviews who were randomly assigned to an attributional retraining condition (controllable attribution focus) or control condition (communication skills focus). Dependent measures included interview-related attributions and actual interview performance. Results showed self-esteem to predict more adaptive attributions and better interview performance in the control group. Findings also demonstrated significant attributional retraining benefits for students with lower self-esteem on attributions and interview success. The authors found unanticipated negative treatment effects for students with higher self-esteem who reported more external attributions and performed substantially worse in employment interviews upon receiving attributional retraining. The authors discuss the implications concerning the risks of high self-esteem and possible improvements to attributional retraining techniques in employment settings.
Keywords
attributional retraining , employment interview , self-esteem
Journal title
The Journal of Experimental Education
Serial Year
2011
Journal title
The Journal of Experimental Education
Record number
708799
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