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Kernis, Michael H. – 1984
Perceived locus of causality is an important factor in assessing the impact of prior success or failure on later performance. In order to examine the effects of internal (self) versus external (partner) attributions on subsequent performance, two studies were conducted. In the first study 80 female undergradutes worked on a series of mazes with an…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, College Students, Higher Education, Locus of Control

Skinner, E. A.; Chapman, M. – Human Development, 1984
Proposes a framework which builds on theories of subjective expectations and which combines a new model of beliefs about control with a process model of intentional action. Applications to the study of control beliefs on cognitive performance are outlined. (RH)
Descriptors: Beliefs, Individual Development, Influences, Locus of Control
Karbowski, Joseph; And Others – 1983
In separate research studies, students who were given a choice of learning materials or who had control over aversive noise, demonstrated higher motivation and better task performance. To investigate the additive effects of choice and control on perception of control, 80 male and female college students participated in a 2 (choice vs. no-choice) X…
Descriptors: College Students, Expectation, Higher Education, Individual Power
Jankovic, Irwin N.; And Others – 1983
The view that humans fail to solve certain types of problems because they are helpless and passive originated from a series of studies with animals; subsequent research attempted to replicate the findings of the learned helplessness behavior with humans. In an attempt to replicate and extend the Hiroto and Seligman (1975) study of humans exposed…
Descriptors: College Students, Failure, Helplessness, Higher Education
Gambro, John S.; Switzky, Harvey N. – 1992
The purpose of this study is to examine multiple influences on twelfth-grade environmental knowledge for a national probability sample of high school students. A longitudinal model was developed and tested incorporating background factors (socioeconomic status and gender) and intervening variables (internal locus of control, level of science…
Descriptors: Causal Models, Environmental Education, Grade 12, High School Students
Slem, Charles M. – 1983
The relationship between classroom absenteeism and academic performance has been well documented. To assess the relationship between absenteeism and traditional stress risk/buffer factors, depressogenic attributional style, depression and academic performance, 68 students completed the Internal-External Control Scale, two versions of life event…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Attendance, Attribution Theory, College Students
Samuel, William; Nilsen, Paul – 1983
Following a traditional learned helplessness paradigm, subjects initially tried to terminate random bursts of noise using a button-pressing manipulandum and next tried to solve 20 serially-presented anagrams. The noise was broadcast at either a loud or soft intensity, and the subject's button-pressing was either successful (Escape condition) or…
Descriptors: Arousal Patterns, Attribution Theory, College Students, Females
Matyas, Marsha Lakes – 1984
A study of exceptional secondary school biology teachers was conducted to determine what factors might be important in encouraging young women to remain on the "science track" during high school. Each teacher had a record of encouraging his/her female students to enroll in further science and mathematics courses. Three questions were…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Biology, Cognitive Style, Females

Hagborg, Winston J. – Learning Disability Quarterly, 1996
Comparison of middle-school-age students with learning disabilities, grouped according to their self-reported ratings of scholastic competence, found significant differences between the low subgroup and the medium/high subgroups on internal locus of control for positive events, school attitudes, and global self-worth. Subgroups did not differ in…
Descriptors: Academic Ability, Academic Achievement, Intelligence, Intermediate Grades