Gender differences in performance attributions: Students' explanations for personal success or failure |
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Authors: | Paul D. Sweeney Richard L. Moreland Kathy L. Gruber |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Psychology, University of Pittsburgh, 15260 Pittsburgh, Pa. |
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Abstract: | Women are often said to exhibit an externality bias in their performance attributions. To test this hypothesis, male and female college students made effort, ability, luck, and task difficulty attributions for their performance on a recent course examination. Measures of the students' affective reactions toward their performance were also obtained. Successful students, whether male or female, made internal attributions and were pleased with their performance. Stronger internal attributions were associated with more positive affective reactions for these students. Unsuccessful female students made external attributions, were displeased with their performance, and felt better when they attributed their failure to unstable factors. Unsuccessful male students were also displeased with their performance, but tended to make more internal attributions for their failure, and felt better as a result. These findings, which suggest the influence of an internality bias among men, rather than an externality bias among women, were interpreted in terms of the male sex role. |
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