A Longitudinal Study of the Domain-Generality of African American Students' Causal Attributions for Academic Success

被引:3
|
作者
Vuletich, Heidi A. [1 ]
Kurtz-Costes, Beth [1 ]
Bollen, Kenneth A. [1 ]
Rowley, Stephanie J. [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ N Carolina, Dept Psychol & Neurosci, CB 3270, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 USA
[2] Univ Michigan, Dept Psychol, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
causal attributions; domain specificity; African Americans; motivation; SELF-EFFICACY; HIGH-SCHOOL; MATHEMATICS ACHIEVEMENT; STRATEGY INSTRUCTION; GENDER STEREOTYPES; CHILDRENS BELIEFS; BLACK BOYS; TASK-VALUE; MOTIVATION; ADOLESCENTS;
D O I
10.1037/edu0000299
中图分类号
G44 [教育心理学];
学科分类号
0402 ; 040202 ;
摘要
Students' causal attributions about the reasons underlying their academic successes are important because of the influence of those attributions on academic motivation. We investigated whether students' success attributions tend to be similar across academic subjects versus specific to academic domain, and whether domain-generality or specificity changes with development. African American students (N = 565) reported their causal attributions for math, science. and English successes longitudinally from elementary to high school. Structural equation modeling showed that individual differences in students' tendencies to attribute successes to ability, effort, or their teachers were domain-general, not differing across academic content areas. Results did not differ by sex. The lack of domain-specificity in attributions suggests that when African American students consider what factors influence their school performance, they view academic outcomes as a single achievement domain rather than differentiating among school subjects.
引用
收藏
页码:459 / 474
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Academic failure and its predictors in Baccalaureate nursing students: A longitudinal study
    Bulfone, Giampiera
    De MARIA, Maddalena
    Maurici, Massimo
    Macale, Loreana
    Sili, Alessandro
    Vellone, Ercole
    Alvaro, Rosaria
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NURSING, 2021, 30 (13-14) : 1953 - 1962
  • [23] How Do Veterinary Students' Motivation and Study Practices Relate to Academic Success?
    Mikkonen, Johanna
    Ruohoniemi, Mirja
    JOURNAL OF VETERINARY MEDICAL EDUCATION, 2011, 38 (03) : 298 - 304
  • [24] Unlocking academic success: the impact of time management on college students' study engagement
    Fu, Yangyang
    Wang, Qiuju
    Wang, Xiaofeng
    Zhong, Haoxuan
    Chen, Junqi
    Fei, Haoyu
    Yao, Yipeng
    Xiao, Yao
    Li, Wenfu
    Li, Na
    BMC PSYCHOLOGY, 2025, 13 (01)
  • [25] The role of teacher care in determining academic success of community college students: a case study from Hong Kong
    Lee, Queenie A. Y.
    Yuen, Mantak
    PASTORAL CARE IN EDUCATION, 2019, 37 (02) : 94 - 107
  • [26] Differences between African American and European American first-year college students in the relationship between self-efficacy, outcome expectations, and academic achievement
    DeFreitas, Stacie Craft
    SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY OF EDUCATION, 2012, 15 (01) : 109 - 123
  • [27] PREDICTORS OF ACHIEVEMENT IN AFRICAN AMERICAN STUDENTS AT RISK FOR ACADEMIC FAILURE: THE ROLES OF ACHIEVEMENT VALUES AND BEHAVIORAL ENGAGEMENT
    Darensbourg, Alicia M.
    Blake, Jamilia J.
    PSYCHOLOGY IN THE SCHOOLS, 2013, 50 (10) : 1044 - 1059
  • [28] Framing African American students' success and failure in urban settings - A typology for change
    Lewis, Chance W.
    James, Marlon
    Hancock, Stephen
    Hill-Jackson, Valerie
    URBAN EDUCATION, 2008, 43 (02) : 127 - 153
  • [29] Negating Stereotype Threat: Autonomy Support and Academic Identification Boost Performance of African American College Students
    Nadler, Dustin R.
    Komarraju, Meera
    JOURNAL OF COLLEGE STUDENT DEVELOPMENT, 2016, 57 (06) : 667 - 679
  • [30] Implications of built and social environments on the academic success among African American youth: testing Strong African American Families intervention effects on parental academic racial socialization
    Murry, Velma McBride
    Gonzalez, Catherine M.
    Debreaux, Marlena L.
    Coates, Erica E.
    Berkel, Cady
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2023, 14