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Adolescent Development | 4 |
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Adolescence | 4 |
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Ross, Jennifer L. | 1 |
Wisniewski, Shirley A. | 1 |
Zaffrann, Ronald T. | 1 |
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Wisniewski, Shirley A.; Gaier, Eugene L. – Adolescence, 1990
Assessed causal attributions for losing perceived by high school students (N=150). Subjects responded to questionnaire comprising three categories of activities (sports, academic, social) in which they had not won or achieved desired outcome. Found that adolescent girls indicated significantly more internal attributions and boys more external…
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Adolescents, Age Differences, Attribution Theory

Chubb, Nancy H.; Fertman, Carl I.; Ross, Jennifer L. – Adolescence, 1997
Examined gender differences and whether self-esteem and locus of control change during the high school years. Longitudinal analysis of students (N=174) indicated a significant main effect for gender, with lower self-esteem scores for girls. Locus of control was influenced by grade and an interaction between grade and gender. (RJM)
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Adolescents, Age Differences, High School Students

Zaffrann, Ronald T. – Adolescence, 1983
Studied the development of attitudes about locus of control in four gifted high school students, using essays, extracurricular activities, and interviews. Results suggested scales are inadequate to describe attitudes about control, self-descriptions are not necessarily substantiated by behavior, and the labels external and internal are imprecise…
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Case Studies, Gifted, High School Students

Di Cindio, Linda A.; And Others – Adolescence, 1983
Examined the parent-peer orientation of 236 high school seniors. Results showed race was the strongest predictor of parent-peer orientation: Blacks tended to be more parent oriented. Respondents with high self-esteem were more parent oriented, while respondents who had an internal locus of control tended to be more peer oriented. (JAC)
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Affiliation Need, High School Seniors, High Schools