Possible selves and academic outcomes: How and when possible selves impel action |
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Authors: | Oyserman Daphna Bybee Deborah Terry Kathy |
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Affiliation: | The Institute for Social Research, The University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48106-1248, USA. daphna.oyserman@umich.edu |
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Abstract: | Puzzled by the gap between academic attainment and academic possible selves (APSs) among low-income and minority teens, the authors hypothesized that APSs alone are not enough unless linked with plausible strategies, made to feel like "true" selves and connected with social identity. A brief intervention to link APSs with strategies, create a context in which social and personal identities felt congruent, and change the meaning associated with difficulty in pursuing APSs (n = 141 experimental, n = 123 control low-income 8th graders) increased success in moving toward APS goals: academic initiative, standardized test scores, and grades improved; and depression, absences, and in-school misbehavior declined. Effects were sustained over a 2-year follow-up and were mediated by change in possible selves. |
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