THE RELATIONSHIP OF TEACHER AND PARENT RATINGS OF ACADEMICALLY RELATED PERSONALITY-TRAITS TO ACADEMIC-PERFORMANCE IN ELEMENTARY AGE STUDENTS

Citation
Tg. Sneed et al., THE RELATIONSHIP OF TEACHER AND PARENT RATINGS OF ACADEMICALLY RELATED PERSONALITY-TRAITS TO ACADEMIC-PERFORMANCE IN ELEMENTARY AGE STUDENTS, Learning and individual differences, 6(1), 1994, pp. 37-64
Citations number
62
Categorie Soggetti
Education & Educational Research
ISSN journal
10416080
Volume
6
Issue
1
Year of publication
1994
Pages
37 - 64
Database
ISI
SICI code
1041-6080(1994)6:1<37:TROTAP>2.0.ZU;2-Q
Abstract
The elementary school years are a critical transition time in the lear ning process of most children. For most children, these are the years that will make or break their academic progress in school and potentia lly in a future career. Research with adults has shown that certain pe rsonality traits (Conscientiousness and Agreeableness) have a signific ant impact on job performance criteria. Based on earlier exploratory r esearch (Sneed 1989), this study hypothesizes that certain personality traits (Conscientiousness and Openness to Experience) will have a sim ilar impact on the achievement of elementary-aged children. The goals in this study were three-fold. The first was to attempt to reproduce t he predictive personality variables. The second was to compare teacher and parent ratings of personality dimensions, particularly in their p otential to form higher-order or broad constructs. The third goal was concerned with external validity and addressed how well the higher-ord er personality factors predicted two criterion-related measures of aca demic skills, Academic Achievement and Word Skills, and whether differ ences in low reading achieving and normal reading achieving students a re mediated by individual differences in the higher-order personality rating factors. That is, do teacher and parent assessment of child com petence play a mediating role in predicting deficits in academic achie vement and reading competence? Structural equation modeling (Joreskog & Sorbom 1988) techniques were used to test these research goals. The results showed that (a) two higher-order factors, Child Competence: Te acher and Child Competence: Parent, explained the relations among five child competence constructs, (b) the higher-order factor Child Compet ence: Teacher predicted individual differences in the two criterion me asures of academic skills, Academic Achievement and Word Skills, and ( c) low achieving students showed significant deficits only in the two higher-order factors. The data suggested a moderating role for the per sonality characteristics represented by the higher-order factors. That is, certain personality dimensions are predicted to have a critical i mpact on achievement.