129 males and females enrolled in introductory educational psychology participated in the study to determine the relationship between self-esteem and depression in college students. Each subject was administered a self-esteem checklist and a scale intended to measure depression on one occasion. The correlation between self-esteem and depression for the total group was .55; the value for males was .53, foe females .56.
26 students, males and females, aged 15 through 18 yr. referred to the school psychologist for assessment participated in the study to determine the relationship between self-esteem and depression in high school students. Each subject was administered a self-esteem checklist and two measures of depression on one occasion. The correlations between self-esteem and depression were significant (.34 to .75) for both measures of depression.
930 boys and girls enrolled in Grades 2 through 9 participated in a study of the relations among self-esteem, depression, and anxiety. The criterion measures correlated significantly for all children, boys and girls in both elementary and junior high groups. Depression correlated higher with total self-esteem for all children, boys and girls in elementary and junior high school groups.
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