Lyon M A, MacDonald N T
Department of Counseling and School Psychology, University ofWisconsin-River Falls 54022.
Psychol Rep. 1990 Jun;66(3 Pt 2):1135-42. doi: 10.2466/pr0.1990.66.3c.1135.
This study examined the relationship of academic self-concept scores of 122 children with their achievement in Grade 6 as compared to general self-concept and locus of control. Academic self-concept correlated significantly higher with teachers' grades and standardized measures of achievement than either general self-concept or locus of control. A multiple regression analysis also confirmed the potential usefulness of academic self-concept for predicting students' achievement. Academic self-concept may be a more useful construct in helping understand students' achievement than frequently administered measures of general self-concept.