Developmental, gender, and academic domain differences in causal attributions and the influence of attributions on classroom engagement were explored longitudinally in 115 African American adolescents. In Grades 8 and 11, adolescents reported attributions for success and failure in math, English and writing, and science. In Grade 11, English and mathematics teachers rated students' classroom engagement. Boys were more likely than girls to attribute math successes to high ability and to attribute English failures to low ability. Both genders' ability attributions for math became more negative from eighth to eleventh grades. Grade 8 attributions of math failure to lack of ability were negatively related to Grade 11 math classroom engagement. ...
Attributions for success and failure have been the topic of much research. One area of focus is that...
Investigation into developmental differences in children\u27s attributions derives from the observat...
We examined relations among African American mothers’ (N = 392) stereotypes about gender differences...
Developmental, gender, and academic domain differences in causal attributions and the influence of a...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/108150/1/AA Attributions.pd
Developmental, gender and academic domain differences in casual attributions and the influence of th...
Ongoing reports of the achievement gap suggest the need for understanding African American students'...
This study investigated the gender and achievement level differences across subject areas in achieve...
The disidentification hypothesis predicts that African-American boys achieve less in school than Afr...
Significant attention has been given to the educational shortcomings of African American students, e...
This study ascertains how positive and negative life events are viewed by stigmatized youngsters. Th...
This study explores the attributions to which undergraduate university students ascribe academic ach...
There is increasing divergence in the academic outcomes of African American males and females. By mo...
The current study was conducted to investigate factors that would motivate African American adolesce...
Adolescents attribute their school success to ability and effort to varying degrees. This study inve...
Attributions for success and failure have been the topic of much research. One area of focus is that...
Investigation into developmental differences in children\u27s attributions derives from the observat...
We examined relations among African American mothers’ (N = 392) stereotypes about gender differences...
Developmental, gender, and academic domain differences in causal attributions and the influence of a...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/108150/1/AA Attributions.pd
Developmental, gender and academic domain differences in casual attributions and the influence of th...
Ongoing reports of the achievement gap suggest the need for understanding African American students'...
This study investigated the gender and achievement level differences across subject areas in achieve...
The disidentification hypothesis predicts that African-American boys achieve less in school than Afr...
Significant attention has been given to the educational shortcomings of African American students, e...
This study ascertains how positive and negative life events are viewed by stigmatized youngsters. Th...
This study explores the attributions to which undergraduate university students ascribe academic ach...
There is increasing divergence in the academic outcomes of African American males and females. By mo...
The current study was conducted to investigate factors that would motivate African American adolesce...
Adolescents attribute their school success to ability and effort to varying degrees. This study inve...
Attributions for success and failure have been the topic of much research. One area of focus is that...
Investigation into developmental differences in children\u27s attributions derives from the observat...
We examined relations among African American mothers’ (N = 392) stereotypes about gender differences...