Ce. Ross et Ba. Broh, The roles of self-esteem and the sense of personal control in the academicachievement process, SOCIOL EDUC, 73(4), 2000, pp. 270-284
This article proposes that academic achievement boosts self-esteem and the
sense of personal control, but that only the latter influences subsequent a
cademic achievement. Most previous research on adolescent self-concept has
included self-esteem or, less commonly, the sense of personal control, but
not both. Using three waves of panel data from the National Educational Lon
gitudinal Study, the authors examined the effects of academic achievement i
n the 8th grade on the sense of personal control and self-esteem in the 10t
h grade and the subsequent effects of control and esteem in the 10th grade
on academic achievement in the 12th grade. They present evidence that the s
ense of personal control affects subsequent academic achievement, but that
self-esteem does not. Earlier academic achievement and parental support inc
rease self-esteem and the sense of personal control. Although the authors e
xpected that achievement would have a larger effect on personal control and
that parental support would have a larger effect on serf-esteem, they foun
d evidence for the former but not for the latter.