Marjoribanks K, Mboya M M
University of Adelaide, Australia.
J Soc Psychol. 1998 Oct;138(5):572-80. doi: 10.1080/00224549809600412.
Relationships among family macrosocial structures, proximate family settings, attributions of responsibility, and African adolescents' self-concepts were examined. Data were collected from 460 South African high school students (234 girls, 226 boys; mean age = 18.6 years). On the basis of partial least squares path modeling, the results suggest that (a) family macrosocial structure, proximate family settings, and the individual's sense of responsibility for academic outcomes had modest to strong associations with different dimensions of self-concept; and (b) there were gender-related differences in the structure of the adolescents' social status backgrounds and self-concepts and in the relationships among social status, perceptions of parents' support for learning, personal responsibility, and self-concept.
研究了家庭宏观社会结构、直接家庭环境、责任归因与非洲青少年自我概念之间的关系。数据收集自460名南非高中生(234名女生,226名男生;平均年龄 = 18.6岁)。基于偏最小二乘路径模型,结果表明:(a)家庭宏观社会结构、直接家庭环境以及个人对学业成绩的责任感与自我概念的不同维度之间存在适度到强烈的关联;(b)青少年社会地位背景和自我概念的结构以及社会地位、对父母学习支持的认知、个人责任感和自我概念之间的关系存在性别差异。