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General and specific self-esteem in late adolescent students: race x gender x SES effects.
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1985
Year
EthnicitySocial PsychologyEducational PsychologyRacial PrejudiceEducationBrookover Self-conceptAdolescenceSocial SciencesPsychologyRaceSelf-efficacy TheoryGender StudiesWhite FemalesSelf-esteemMinority StressSchool FunctioningSocial IdentitySchool PsychologyStudent SuccessSocial ClassAdolescent PsychologyApplied Social PsychologyAdolescent DevelopmentLate Adolescent StudentsSelf-assessment
This study assessed the effects of gender, race, and social class on the general and area-specific self-esteem of high school students. One hundred and ninety-five high school students served as subjects in a 2 (gender: male, female) X 2 (race: black, white) X 3 (social class: low, middle and high) factorial design. The Rosenberg General Self-Esteem, the Piers-Harris Children's Self-Concept, and the Brookover Self-Concept of Ability and School Achievement scales were the measures of either general or specific self-esteem. Females, whites, and lower social class adolescents were consistently lower in their self-esteem scores than were males, blacks, and upper social class teenagers, respectively. White females were found to be lower in general and happiness self-esteem than all other gender by race subgroups. High SES white students were lower on the happiness and behavior self-esteem measures than black students and white middle-class students. Black males and white females were less confident in their school ability than were black females and white males.