Journal of Educational Psychology | 2019

A Longitudinal Study of the Domain-Generality of African American Students’ Causal Attributions for Academic Success

 
 
 
 

Abstract


Students’ causal attributions about the reasons underlying their academic successes are important because of the influence of those attributions on academic motivation. We investigated whether students’ success attributions tend to be similar across academic subjects versus specific to academic domain, and whether domain-generality or specificity changes with development. African American students (N = 565) reported their causal attributions for math, science, and English successes longitudinally from elementary to high school. Structural equation modeling showed that individual differences in students’ tendencies to attribute successes to ability, effort, or their teachers were domain-general, not differing across academic content areas. Results did not differ by sex. The lack of domain-specificity in attributions suggests that when African American students consider what factors influence their school performance, they view academic outcomes as a single achievement domain rather than differentiating among school subjects.

Volume 111
Pages 459–474
DOI 10.1037/edu0000299
Language English
Journal Journal of Educational Psychology

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