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Peer reviewedOren, Ditza L. – Journal of Educational Research, 1983
A study explored the effects of classroom feedback and evaluation structure on students' attributional tendencies. Results suggest that the classroom feedback and evaluation system affect students' causal explanations of failure and success. (Author/CJ)
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Classroom Communication, Evaluation Methods, Feedback
Peer reviewedArkin, Robert M.; Walts, Elizabeth A. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1983
The effects of corrective testing and how such feedback might affect high- and low-test-anxious students differently are indicated. Subjects were 286 college students in three classes--one using mastery testing and two using multiple choice tests. (Author/PN)
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Feedback, Higher Education, Mastery Tests
Peer reviewedBrown, Ric – College Student Journal, 1983
Explored the relationship between attribution of success and sex role orientation of women (N=114) in graduate school. Results indicated that, among achievement oriented college women, attributional style was related to sex role orientation. Women who were more traditional saw their reinforcers coming from family and social forces. (JAC)
Descriptors: Achievement Need, Attribution Theory, Females, Graduate Students
Peer reviewedMcMillan, J. H.; Spratt, K. F. – British Journal of Educational Psychology, 1983
Reports research into the affective responses of 75 University of Iowa undergraduate students to situations varying in achievement outcome, task importance, and effort. Analysis of variance indicates that the affective component score is dependent mainly on the student's perceptions of his/her academic success or failure. (EAO)
Descriptors: Academic Aspiration, Academic Failure, Achievement, Achievement Need
Peer reviewedCrosby, Richard – Journal of School Health, 1982
Self-concept development is basic to health education. Health educators should give students the "tools" to develop their own self-concept as a lifelong skill, rather than as a transitory interest. Several methods and activities exist that can improve human interaction, decision making, and personal growth. (FG)
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Elementary Secondary Education, Health Education, Humanistic Education
Health Education (Washington D.C.), 1983
Health educators may be expecting the public to accept too much personal responsibility for disease. Genetic, environmental, and other factors may be as important as health-promoting behavior in avoiding disease. If health educators overstate the role of personal responsibility for health, they may lose credibility with the public. (PP)
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Behavior Patterns, Biological Influences, Disease Control
Peer reviewedParsons, Jacquelynne Eccles – Sex Roles: A Journal of Research, 1982
Over 300 students assessed their causal attributions and expectations for success and failure in mathematics, and their self concepts of math ability. Results varied, depending on research method employed, but did not when taken together support the hypothesis that girls are more learned helpless in mathematics than are boys. (Author/GC)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Attribution Theory, Children, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedBlocker, Richard A.; Edwards, R. P. – Psychology in the Schools, 1982
Discusses the role of extrinsic reinforcement in intrinsic motivation in cognitive attribution theory. Concludes that cognitive attribution theory lacks parsimony, in that extant reinforcement analysis can account for undermining with equal facility. Suggests undermining is of little significance due to its elusive and transient impact on operant…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Behavior Patterns, Cognitive Style, Educational Strategies
Peer reviewedSkager, Rodney – International Review of Education, 1979
Six theoretical positions on human learning are identified as relevant to the development of self-direction: modeling; reinforcement; curiosity motivation; competency motivation; attribution theory and personal causation; and humanism. Four approaches to educational practice associated with self-direction are identified: experimental learning;…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Educational Environment, Educational Strategies, Educational Theories
Peer reviewedLittig, Lawrence W.; And Others – Journal of Research in Personality, 1980
Hypothesis that externally oriented Black male subjects would view themselves as more Negro in appearance than they were judged by observers was tested by comparing subjects' and observers' judgments on scale of 15 faces which changed from Negro to Caucasian. Hypothesis was contradicted in 1968 study, supported in 1975. (Author/NRB)
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Blacks, Body Image, Individual Characteristics
Peer reviewedDoherty, William J. – Family Relations, 1982
Examined the relationship between spouses' (N=58) attributional styles for marital problems and their negative social reinforcement in a laboratory interaction procedure. Results indicated wives who attributed other couples' marital problems to undesirable personality traits or negative attitudes were more likely to verbally criticize their…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Cognitive Processes, Interpersonal Relationship, Marital Instability
Peer reviewedBerg, John H.; And Others – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 1981
Studied the determinants of attributional modesty in women. Women tend to make modest attributions for success when concerned about how others would evaluate them and when concerned about their self-image. Self-derogatory attributions for failure occur when the subjects thought their attributions would be public. (Author/JAC)
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Females, Higher Education, Interpersonal Relationship
Peer reviewedBar-Tal, D.; Guttmann, J. – British Journal of Educational Psychology, 1981
Eight female fourth- and fifth-grade mathematics teachers, 69 of their middle-class pupils, and the pupils' parents were asked to indicate the extent to which each of 10 given causes influenced the pupil's grade. Their perceptions on teacher, pupil, and parent responsibility for success and failure are compared. (Author/SJL)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Failure, Attribution Theory, Comparative Analysis
Peer reviewedFrieze, Irene Hanson; Snyder, Howard Nelson – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1980
Children from a Catholic elementary school were interviewed to determine what they saw as probable causes for success or failure in four situations: a school testing situation an art project, playing football, and catching frogs. Causal explanations were found to differ across the four situations. (Author/GDC)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Achievement, Age Differences, Attribution Theory
Peer reviewedMedway, Frederic J. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1979
Results of two studies of teachers' attributions for school problems indicate that teachers hold student factors more responsible for classroom problems than teacher factors, and that teachers' attributions vary for learning v behavior problems. The second study also indicates that students perceived as lacking motivation were criticized more…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Behavior Problems, Classroom Observation Techniques, Elementary School Teachers


