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LEARNED HELPLESSNESS ATTRIBUTIONAL STYLE AND EXAMINATION PERFORMANCE: ENHANCEMENT EFFECTS ARE NOT NECESSARILY MODERATED BY PRIOR FAILURE
Authors:Penny L. Yee  Gregory R. Pierce  J. T. Ptacek  Kristine L. Modzelesky
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology , Hamilton College , NY, Clintonpyee@hamilton.edu;3. Department of Psychology , Hamilton College , NY, Clinton;4. Department of Psychology , Bucknell University
Abstract:Studies have replicated both negative and positive associations between helpless attributional style and academic performance. Laboratory studies indicate that when enhancement effects occur, they may be moderated by the degree of failure individuals experience prior to task performance. In a longitudinal study of 96 college students who completed four examinations in two introductory psychology courses, we examined the relationship between helpless attributional style and examination performance across the semester, and whether prior examination failure moderated this association. Correlational analyses revealed that helpless attributional style was unrelated to exam performance in the first half of the semester and was positively related to improvements in performance in the second half. Regression analyses indicated that these enhancement effects were not moderated by previous performance on examinations in the course. The present findings underscore the need for longitudinal studies that investigate the pattern of associations between helpless attributional style and performance across time in real-life contexts.
Keywords:Attributional style  Examination performance  Learned helplessness
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