Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
10452277 Cognitive Development 2005 15 Pages PDF
Abstract
The present study examined the importance of different sources of information for the development of children's self-perceptions of early school-related ability. In a sample of German elementary school children (N = 595) it was demonstrated that the associations between pupils' ability self-perceptions on the one hand and parents' perception of their children's ability, pupils' intelligence and teacher-rated school achievement on the other increased throughout elementary school. In a second step, commonality analyses were employed in two subsamples (N = 416 and N = 145) to partition variance in children's self-perceptions that was specifically explained by either teacher-rated school achievement or parents' perceptions, or by both variables. The results support the assumption that the importance of teacher evaluations for children's ability self-perceptions increases while the importance of parents' perceptions decreases during the early school years.
Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Developmental and Educational Psychology
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