Attributional profiles: Considering multiple causal attributions for success and failure at the beginning of secondary school
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| Publication date | 04-2023 |
| Journal | Contemporary Educational Psychology |
| Article number | 102164 |
| Volume | Issue number | 73 |
| Number of pages | 21 |
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| Abstract |
Students typically perceive their successes and failures to have
multiple causes. The present study examined students’ profiles of causal
attributions for success and failure during the first year of secondary
school. The stability of attributional profile membership was assessed
across three timepoints. Furthermore, it was examined whether students
characterized by different attribution profiles differed in their levels
of school engagement, self-esteem, and school performance. Latent
profile analyses and latent transition analyses among 657 first-year
Dutch secondary school students (Mage = 12.6, SD = 0.4) identified four attributional profiles, which were similar across the three timepoints. The profiles were labelled uncontrollable failure, controllable failure, uncontrollable success, and undifferentiated. About half of the students (52 %) remained member of the same profile across the three timepoints. Students in the uncontrollable success
profile reported significantly lower levels of school engagement and
self-esteem, and performed less well in school compared to students in
the other profiles. Students in the uncontrollable failure profile and the controllable failure
profile did not differ from each other with regard to school
engagement, self-esteem, and school performance. The findings suggest
that attributional retraining interventions may want to shift their
focus from changing uncontrollable failure attributions to changing
students’ external, uncontrollable attributions for success.
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| Document type | Article |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cedpsych.2023.102164 |
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