The impact of sex,achievement domain,and conceptual orientation on causal attributions |
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Authors: | Cheryl Brown Travis John Burnett-Doering Pamela T. Reid |
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Affiliation: | (1) University of Tennessee, Knoxville;(2) University of Tennessee, Chattanooga |
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Abstract: | Sex differences in achievement domain and achievement orientation were examined to better understand women's achievement. College students (84 women, 59 men) were asked to write brief accounts of a past success and a past failure and to provide causal attributions for each. More women recalled affiliative-process events, and proportionally more men recalled mastery-impact events. The relationship of topic domain and conceptual orientation to causal attributions was apparent only for accounts of failure. Topic domain and conceptual orientation interacted with sex to further influence stability attributions. When women conceptualized failure as a process, they emphasized attributions to effort and luck, while men accounted for the process failure by ability and task. When the failure was conceptualized in terms of final impact, the sex pattern of attributions was reversed. |
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