Self-verification as a mediator of mothers' self-fulfilling effects on adolescents' educational attainment |
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Authors: | Scherr Kyle C Madon Stephanie Guyll Max Willard Jennifer Spoth Richard |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, Iowa State University, Ames, IA 50011, USA. kscherr@iastate.edu |
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Abstract: | This research examined whether self-verification acts as a general mediational process of self-fulfilling prophecies. The authors tested this hypothesis by examining whether self-verification processes mediated self-fulfilling prophecy effects within a different context and with a different belief and a different outcome than has been used in prior research. Results of longitudinal data obtained from mothers and their adolescents (N=332) indicated that mothers' beliefs about their adolescents' educational outcomes had a significant indirect effect on adolescents' academic attainment through adolescents' educational aspirations. This effect, observed over a 6-year span, provided evidence that mothers' self-fulfilling effects occurred, in part, because mothers' false beliefs influenced their adolescents' own educational aspirations, which adolescents then self-verified through their educational attainment. The theoretical and applied implications of these findings are discussed. |
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