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Self-Evaluation in Young Children
Deborah Stipek,Susan L. Recchia,Susan McClintic +2 more
- 01 Apr 1992
TL;DR: The development of self-evaluation in the moral domain may parallel this developmental sequence proposed for the achievement domain, and caretakers' reactions to rule violations might engender concerns about meeting adult expectations in achievement contexts.
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Abstract: A series of studies was conducted to examine the development of self-evaluation in children aged 1-5 years. Developmental changes in children's reactions to achievement-related outcomes were assessed in a variety of contexts, using different tasks and different criteria for success. The first study of 1-3-year-olds revealed an increased social orientation after the age of 21 months. Only children over this age were more likely to look up at the experimenter after they had produced an outcome themselves than after the same outcome had been produced by the experimenter. These older children were also more likely than younger children to call their mothers' attention to their achievements in a free-play situation. In a second study, on a task with visibly salient success versus failure outcomes, children aged 2-5 years responded to success with positive affect (e.g., smiling) and to failure with avoidance reactions (e.g., looking away from the experimenter). Praise enhanced children's positive affective reactions to success, but its effect was modest. In the final study, winning or losing on a competitive task was not understood by children below age 33 months and had no effect on their affective reactions to the task. In contrast, winning enhanced older children's pleasure in completing the task. Three stages are proposed in the development of self-evaluation. In the first stage, children experience joy in causality, but they lack the cognitive representational skills required for self-evaluation in a self-reflective sense, and they do not anticipate others' reactions to their performance. In the second stage, beginning before the age of 2 years, children anticipate adult reactions, seeking positive reactions to their successes and endeavoring to avoid negative reactions to failure. The proposed third stage involves a gradual internalization of external reactions, with children beginning to evaluate their performance and react emotionally to success and failure independently of their expectations of adult reactions. Although all studies focused on achievement outcomes, the development of self-evaluation in the moral domain may parallel this developmental sequence proposed for the achievement domain. It is also proposed that caretakers' reactions to rule violations might engender concerns about meeting adult expectations in achievement contexts.
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Citations
Development of achievement motivation.
Allan Wigfield,Jacquelynne S. Eccles +1 more
- 01 Jun 2007
TL;DR: In this article, the development of self-determination in Middle Childhood and Adolescence is discussed. But, the authors focus on the need-based approach and do not address the need for instruction.
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Expectancy-Value Theory of Achievement Motivation: A Developmental Perspective
TL;DR: In this article, the development of young children's competence beliefs, expectancies for success, subjective task values, and achievement goals can be incorporated into the model of achievement performance and choice from a developmental perspective.
The Development of Competence Beliefs, Expectancies for Success, and Achievement Values from Childhood through Adolescence
Allan Wigfield,Jacquelynne S. Eccles +1 more
- 01 Jan 2002
TL;DR: The authors reviewed the research on the development of children's competence-expectancy beliefs and achievement values and discussed how children's expectancies and values relate to their achievement behaviors and activity choices.
881
Motivational and Emotional Aspects of the Self
TL;DR: These motives and emotions to self-enhance, self-verify, and self-expand do not operate to maintain certain states of the self, as some have suggested, but rather to facilitate people's social interactions and relationships.
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References
•Book
心理学原理 = The principles of psychology
William James
- 01 Jan 2010
Abstract: Arguably the greatest single work in the history of psychology. James's analyses of habit, the nature of emotion, the phenomenology of attention, the stream of thought, the perception of space, and the multiplicity of the consciousness of self are still widely cited and incorporated into contemporary theoretical accounts of these phenomena.
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A social-cognitive approach to motivation and personality
Carol S. Dweck,Ellen L. Leggett +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a research-based model that accounts for these patterns in terms of underlying psychological processes, and place the model in its broadest context and examine its implications for our understanding of motivational and personality processes.
Childhood and Society
Joseph B. Perry,Erik H. Erikson +1 more
Abstract: The original and vastly influential ideas of Erik H. Erikson underlie much of our understanding of human development. His insights into the interdependence of the individuals' growth and historical change, his now-famous concepts of identity, growth, and the life cycle, have changed the way we perceive ourselves and society. Widely read and cited, his works have won numerous awards including the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award. Combining the insights of clinical psychoanalysis with a new approach to cultural anthropology, Childhood and Society deals with the relationships between childhood training and cultural accomplishment, analyzing the infantile and the mature, the modern and the archaic elements in human motivation. It was hailed upon its first publication as "a rare and living combination of European and American thought in the human sciences" (Margaret Mead, The American Scholar). Translated into numerous foreign languages, it has gone on to become a classic in the study of the social significance of childhood.
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Emotion Work, Feeling Rules, and Social Structure
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