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Morgan, Carole; And Others – Adolescence, 1995
Sexually active girls (n=64) at a clinic were surveyed. When those with a history of pregnancy were compared with never-pregnant girls, 2 significant differences were found: girls with pregnancy history had first intercourse at the mean age of 15 instead of 16, and scored higher on the "Powerful Other" Health Locus of Control subscale, a measure…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Females, Higher Education, Locus of Control
Burke, Edmund J., Jr.; Straub, William F. – 1976
Psycho-social factors in successful age-group swimmers were explored in this study. The subjects were 50 female and 39 male participants in the 1975 Amateur Athletic Union National Junior Olympics who were asked to answer a set of questions from an open-ended questionnaire. The results support a picture of young persons who invest a great deal of…
Descriptors: Athletes, Athletics, Females, Lifetime Sports
Chan, Florentius – 1983
According to the major attributional hypotheses, egotism and expectancy confirmation, people tend to make internal attributions when successful and external attributions when they fail. In order to investigate the effect of manipulation on egotistical and expectancy confirmation attributions, 190 female undergraduates participated in two series of…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, College Students, Congruence (Psychology), Egocentrism
Kearney, Maureen J.; Kearney, James F. – 1977
The Internal-External (I-E) Locus of Control scale (Rotter, 1966) was administered to 185 male and 185 female university students. The resulting scores were factored, producing two factors for males and four for females. The male factors were the generally-accepted "luck" and "powerful others"; for women, however, the "powerful others" dimension…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, College Students, Females, Individual Power
Katovsky, Walter – 1976
Subjects were four groups of 12 college women, high or low in motive to avoid success (MAS) and locus of control (LC), were reinforced for response A on a fixed partial reinforcement schedule on three concept learning tasks, one task consisting of combined reward and punishment, another of reward only, and one of punishment only. Response B was…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, College Students, Fear of Success, Females
Burlin, Frances-Dee – 1974
The purpose of this paper was to present findings from a study that investigated the ideal and real occupational aspirations (classified as Innovative, Moderate, or Traditional) among adolescent females with respect to locus of control and other social and psychological variables, e.g., parental education, mother's work and occupational status.…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Aspiration, Career Awareness, Females

Mannarino, Anthony P.; Cohen, Judith A. – Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 1996
Examines abuse-related attributions and perceptions, general attributions, and locus of control and their psychological impact on sexually abused girls. Seventy-seven subjects and 88 controls were administered the Children's Attributional Style Questionnaire and the Locus of Control Scale for Children. Discusses clinical and research implications…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Behavior Theories, Child Abuse, Children

Kanoy, Korrell W.; And Others – Journal of College Student Development, 1990
Explored differences between high- and low-achieving freshmen women on cognitive and psychological variables. Results support hypotheses that high achievers would have a more internal locus of control, be more cognitively complex, possess a higher academic self-concept, and report more confidence in their ability and effort than would students in…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Cognitive Style, College Freshmen, Females
Thomas, Sandra P. – 1992
Although health is a key element in one's experience of middle adulthood as a time of productivity and personal fulfillment, research on psychosocial factors predictive of mid-life health is sparse, especially for women. Psychosocial variables are not only highly salient to health, but also are potentially modifiable by women themselves. This…
Descriptors: Adult Development, Aging (Individuals), Females, Locus of Control
Tomala, Gail; Behuniak, Peter, Jr. – 1981
The pattern of changes in locus of control for college persisters and dropouts were examined over a three-year period, and differences between males and females were considered. Data on 6,608 students enrolled in four-year U.S. colleges were collected in 1973, 1974, and 1975. A repeated measures analysis of locus of control composite scores…
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, College Students, Comparative Analysis, Dropout Characteristics
Hadley, Ollie B.; Andrews, James – 1978
All nine administrators at Los Angeles Southwest College (LASC) were surveyed to determine their political, social, and psychological background. Three separate instruments focused on leadership style, need for authority, and locus of control. Comparisons were made to determine the extent to which leadership styles were similar and to discover…
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Administrator Characteristics, Age, Authoritarianism

Briere, Nathalie M.; Vallerand, Robert J. – Journal of Social Psychology, 1990
Sixty-two French-Canadian women undergraduates participated in a study analyzing the effects of private self-consciousness on attribution. Shows women with high private self-consciousness, when told they performed well, attributed success to more internal, stable, and controllable factors than other subjects. In no-outcome conditions, no…
Descriptors: Analysis of Variance, Attribution Theory, Causal Models, College Students