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Nowicki, Stephen, Jr. – Journal of Research in Personality, 1982
Tested the hypothesis that internals will achieve more than externals in situations where competition is preeminent but not where cooperation is requried. Children (N=300) were divided into internals and externals, placed in situations varying in competition and cooperation, and readministered digit-symbol task. The general hypothesis was…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Behavior Patterns, Children, Competition
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Evans, Ronald G. – Journal of Research in Personality, 1980
Experiments investigate hypothesis that vulnerable self-esteem internals and externals react more defensively to negative intellectual and personality feedback than congruent internals and externals. Suggested that consistently internal view of causation may increase stress in evaluative situations. Discusses implications for understanding…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Congruence (Psychology), Emotional Response, Evaluators
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Reno, Rochelle – Journal of Research in Personality, 1981
Tested and extended Deaux's expectancy model of sex-linked differences in attribution for success. Finding's indicated that female occupational subjects, relative to males, tended to attribute success more to unstable causes of effort and luck. Male subjects attributed success more to the stable causes of ability and task ease. (Author/RC)
Descriptors: Achievement Need, Adults, Attribution Theory, Comparative Analysis
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Raine, Adrian; And Others – Journal of Research in Personality, 1982
Predicted that an external locus of control would characterize undersocialization. Tested this hypothesis on a random sample of secondary school children (N=97). Scores from the Child Nowicki-Strickland Internal-External Scale were found to predict undersocialization in the expected direction. Suggested several possible interpretations of this…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Factor Analysis, Foreign Countries, Locus of Control