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Characteristics of academically-influential children: achievement motivation and social status
Authors:Lindsay C. Masland  A. Michele Lease
Affiliation:1.Department of Psychology,Appalachian State University,Boone,USA;2.Department of Educational Psychology and Instructional Technology,University of Georgia,Athens,USA
Abstract:The contributions of academic achievement motivation and social status to peer-reported academic influence were explored in a sample of 322 children in grades three through five. Latent moderated structural equation modeling indicated that children who value academics are more likely to be rated by peers as academically influential. Social status also explained variability in academic influence, with well-liked and/or perceived popular children receiving more influence nominations than children low in social status. Additionally, social status moderated the relationship between motivation and influence such that children who were high in both academic value and social status were more likely to be nominated as academically influential than children low in those constructs. Contrary to expectations, academic self-efficacy was unrelated to peer-reported academic influence.
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