JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org.. Wiley-Blackwell and Society for Research in Child Development are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Child Development.of Achievement Attitudes and Beliefs: Parental Influences. CHILD DEVELOPMENT, 1982, 53, 310-321. To assess the impact of parents on children's achievement self-concept and related beliefs, extensive questionnaires measuring attitudes and beliefs regarding mathematics achievement were administered to children in grades 5-11 and their parents. The potential influence of parents both as role models and as expectancy socializers was investigated. Both mothers and fathers held sex-differentiated perceptions of their children's math aptitude despite the similarity of the actual performance of boys and girls. The difference was most marked for parents' estimates of how hard their children had to try to do well in math. Parents of daughters believed their child had to work harder to do well in math than parents of sons. Parents of sons thought advanced math was more important for their child than parents of daughters. Parents' perceptions of and expectations for their children were related to both the children's perceptions of their parents' beliefs and to the children's self-and task perceptions. Further, parents' beliefs were more directly related to children's self-concepts and expectancies than were the children's past performances in math. Path analysis supported our hypothesis that the children's attitudes were influenced more by their parents' attitudes about their abilities than by their own past performances. Finally, parents as role models of sex-differentiated math behaviors did not have a direct effect on their children's self-concepts, expectations, or course plans. The existence of a sex difference in expectancies for success and in self-concept of ability from middle childhood on is well documented (see Frieze, Fisher, Hanusa, McHugh, & Valle [1978]; Lenney [1977]; Parsons, Ruble, Hodges, & Small [1976]; and Stein & Bailey [1973] for reviews). However, the developmental origins of this difference are unclear. Parsons et al. (1976) suggested several ways in which teachers and parents might be perpetuating, if not creating, this sex difference. While several recent studies of possible teacher influences have emerged (e.g., Brophy & Good 1974; Dweck, Davidson, Nelson, & Enna 1978), there have been virtually no recent studies of parental influences. The study reported herein was designed to assess parental influences on children's achievement expectancies and selfconcepts of ability with a particular focus on the contributions of parents to the commonly reported sex differences. The roles of parents both as models and as expect...
To compare four major social cognitive theories of sex differences in achievement, 200 students in Grades 8-10 were given the following attitudinal measures regarding both math and English: self-concept of ability, subjective task value, perceived task difficulty, and continuing motivation. In a follow-up, the students' math course enrollment decisions were assessed each year through high school. One hundred forty-two of these students also participated in an experimental session in which they were exposed to two sets of trials: a number sequence set and an anagram set. Outcome was manipulated across trials (success, failure, success). For each series, students provided estimates of their ability, their expectations for continued success, and causal attributions. Their response time, persistence, and accuracy were recorded. Finally, teacher estimates of learned helplessness were obtained in Year 1 of the study for all students. Four important results emerged: (a) Subjective task value emerged as the strongest mediator of sex differences in achievementrelated behaviors and plans; (b) there was little support for learned-helplessness models of sex differences in achievement; (c) there was some evidence of sex differences in ability attributions, but these differences occurred only among lowexpectancy subjects; and (d) verbal and behavioral indexes of achievement beliefs were often inconsistent. The implications of these results for general attribution theory and for sex-difference theory are discussed.Two areas of cognitive functioning reveal example, among the bachelor degrees awarded fairly consistent patterns of sex differences, in 1979, women received only 6% of those in Girls typically perform better than boys on engineering, 18% in computer and informaverbal tasks, whereas boys perform better than tipnal science, 18% in physical science, and girls on quantitative tasks; these differences, 34% in mathematics. In contrast, 80% of however, are quite small, accounting for only bachelor degrees in letters, 68% in education, l%-2% of variance in the criterion measure, and 80% in library science went to women and do not occur with regularity until the ad-(Randour, Strasburg, & Lipman-Blumen, descent years (see Eccles, 1983;Hyde, 1981Hyde, ). 1982. Several different explanations have been Sex differences in high school courses enroll-offered to account for these sex differences in ment, college majors, and adult careers reflect academic achievement patterns. In this study, a similar, though more extreme, pattern. For we compare and test the four most popular of the attitudinal and motivational explanations.' :In particular, we compare explanations grow-This research was funded by National Institute of Mental in 8 out of self-concept theory, attribution the-Health Grant i RO i MH 31724 and a Spencer Foundation ory, learned-helplessness/mastery-orientation grant to the first author. We extend grateful acknowledg-theory, and expectancy-value theory. ments to Carol Midgley, Caroline Kaczala, Toby Jayaratne; to the count...
This investigation assessed the hypothesis that girls are more likely to be learned helpless in math than boys. Students in grades 5 through 11 completed questionnaires assessing their causal attributions for success and failure in mathematics, their self-concepts of math ability, and their expectations for both current and future success in math. Results indicated that sex differences in attributions depended on the type of methodology used (open-ended or rank-ordered questions). The most consistent difference involved the differential use and ranking of ability, skills, and consistent effort. No sex differences were found in either students" perceptions of their own math ability or in their current achievement expectations. Girls, however, rated their future expectations slightly lower than did boys. Taken together, these results provide little support for the hypothesis that girls are generally more learned helpless in mathematics than are boys. Competence and confidence in learning mathematics have been identified as critical mediators of both educational and occupational choices. Mathematical skills are important for admission to many college majors, for most professional occupations, and, increasingly, for many computerized technical occupations as well (see Brush, 1980; Fox, Brody, & Tobin, 1980). Yet female students are less likely than male students to take advanced high school and college math courses. Considerable attention has been directed toward understanding the biological, psychological, and sociocultural factors contributing to this problem (for recent reviews see
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.