Academic self-concept and possible selves of high-ability African American males attending a specialized school for gifted and talented high school students.

This study has looked at the temporal and multidimensional self in high-ability African American males attending a specialized school for high-ability youth. Interviews were conducted with 9 students. Results provided details about the hoped-for and feared selves the young men envisioned as well as...

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Main Author: Frazier, Andrea D.
Other Authors: Cross, Tracy L.
Format: Others
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://cardinalscholar.bsu.edu/handle/123456789/193401
http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/1467031
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spelling ndltd-BSU-oai-cardinalscholar.bsu.edu-123456789-1934012014-07-15T03:31:48ZAcademic self-concept and possible selves of high-ability African American males attending a specialized school for gifted and talented high school students.Frazier, Andrea D.Self-perception in adolescenceAcademic achievementAfrican American high school students--PsychologyHigh school boys--PsychologyGifted teenagers--PsychologyThis study has looked at the temporal and multidimensional self in high-ability African American males attending a specialized school for high-ability youth. Interviews were conducted with 9 students. Results provided details about the hoped-for and feared selves the young men envisioned as well as the strategies these youth utilized to realize and avoid these possibilities for their future. The interviews also demonstrated the impact of family, the specialized school’s culture, their neighborhoods, and racism on the possibilities the young men envisioned for themselves. Interrelationships between the attempt to attain possible selves, academic self-concept, socioeconomic status, race, and year in school were assessed via a path model with data from 253 high-ability male students attending the specialized school. The nature of the relationships amongst the variables revealed that older students better able to attain or avoid possible selves had higher academic self-concepts. Higher academic self-concepts resulted in higher grades and SAT scores.Department of Educational PsychologyCross, Tracy L.2011-06-09T15:28:34Z2011-06-09T15:28:34Z20092009vii, 181 p. : digital, PDF file, ill.http://cardinalscholar.bsu.edu/handle/123456789/193401http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/1467031CardinalScholar 1.0n-us---
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Self-perception in adolescence
Academic achievement
African American high school students--Psychology
High school boys--Psychology
Gifted teenagers--Psychology
spellingShingle Self-perception in adolescence
Academic achievement
African American high school students--Psychology
High school boys--Psychology
Gifted teenagers--Psychology
Frazier, Andrea D.
Academic self-concept and possible selves of high-ability African American males attending a specialized school for gifted and talented high school students.
description This study has looked at the temporal and multidimensional self in high-ability African American males attending a specialized school for high-ability youth. Interviews were conducted with 9 students. Results provided details about the hoped-for and feared selves the young men envisioned as well as the strategies these youth utilized to realize and avoid these possibilities for their future. The interviews also demonstrated the impact of family, the specialized school’s culture, their neighborhoods, and racism on the possibilities the young men envisioned for themselves. Interrelationships between the attempt to attain possible selves, academic self-concept, socioeconomic status, race, and year in school were assessed via a path model with data from 253 high-ability male students attending the specialized school. The nature of the relationships amongst the variables revealed that older students better able to attain or avoid possible selves had higher academic self-concepts. Higher academic self-concepts resulted in higher grades and SAT scores. === Department of Educational Psychology
author2 Cross, Tracy L.
author_facet Cross, Tracy L.
Frazier, Andrea D.
author Frazier, Andrea D.
author_sort Frazier, Andrea D.
title Academic self-concept and possible selves of high-ability African American males attending a specialized school for gifted and talented high school students.
title_short Academic self-concept and possible selves of high-ability African American males attending a specialized school for gifted and talented high school students.
title_full Academic self-concept and possible selves of high-ability African American males attending a specialized school for gifted and talented high school students.
title_fullStr Academic self-concept and possible selves of high-ability African American males attending a specialized school for gifted and talented high school students.
title_full_unstemmed Academic self-concept and possible selves of high-ability African American males attending a specialized school for gifted and talented high school students.
title_sort academic self-concept and possible selves of high-ability african american males attending a specialized school for gifted and talented high school students.
publishDate 2011
url http://cardinalscholar.bsu.edu/handle/123456789/193401
http://liblink.bsu.edu/uhtbin/catkey/1467031
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