This study ascertains how positive and negative life events are viewed by stigmatized youngsters. The causal attributions of a sample of 139 at -risk AfricanAmerican adolescents are analyzed in a doubly multivariate repeated measures design. These students were participants in either the federally funded Summer Training and Education Program or the Student Academic and Leadership Enhancement Program funded by the Detroit Compact. Previous research on these students indicated that they have higher than norm global self-concepts and their locus of control is more external than would be expected for their age. The findings of the current study suggest that the attributions these youngsters ascribed to positive events were significantly more in...
This study is an exploratory study designed to measure the self-concept as well as assertiveness of ...
Existing scholarship on self-concept and its relevance to personal agency in the classroom does not ...
Positive attribution style, negative attribution style, and generalised peer trust beliefs were exam...
This study ascertains how positive and negative life events are viewed by stigmatized youngsters. Th...
This study focussed on the development and validation of an attributional style (AS) measure, the Te...
The aim of the study was to investigate the relationships between attribution style and social, emot...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/108150/1/AA Attributions.pd
The present study examined discrimination attributions in the psychological well-being of Black adol...
Ongoing reports of the achievement gap suggest the need for understanding African American students'...
Developmental, gender, and academic domain differences in causal attributions and the influence of a...
Black Americans exhibit significantly more aggressive behaviors than do white Americans and these ag...
Crocker and Major (1989) hypothesized three mechanisms by which members of stigmatized groups may pr...
Racial socialization was examined as a protective factor that might buffer African American youth fr...
Previous research has linked attributional style in children to self-esteem, loneliness, depression,...
The purpose of this study was to examine two types of racial socialization messages (preparation for...
This study is an exploratory study designed to measure the self-concept as well as assertiveness of ...
Existing scholarship on self-concept and its relevance to personal agency in the classroom does not ...
Positive attribution style, negative attribution style, and generalised peer trust beliefs were exam...
This study ascertains how positive and negative life events are viewed by stigmatized youngsters. Th...
This study focussed on the development and validation of an attributional style (AS) measure, the Te...
The aim of the study was to investigate the relationships between attribution style and social, emot...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/108150/1/AA Attributions.pd
The present study examined discrimination attributions in the psychological well-being of Black adol...
Ongoing reports of the achievement gap suggest the need for understanding African American students'...
Developmental, gender, and academic domain differences in causal attributions and the influence of a...
Black Americans exhibit significantly more aggressive behaviors than do white Americans and these ag...
Crocker and Major (1989) hypothesized three mechanisms by which members of stigmatized groups may pr...
Racial socialization was examined as a protective factor that might buffer African American youth fr...
Previous research has linked attributional style in children to self-esteem, loneliness, depression,...
The purpose of this study was to examine two types of racial socialization messages (preparation for...
This study is an exploratory study designed to measure the self-concept as well as assertiveness of ...
Existing scholarship on self-concept and its relevance to personal agency in the classroom does not ...
Positive attribution style, negative attribution style, and generalised peer trust beliefs were exam...