Excuses,Excuses: Self-Handicapping in an Australian Adolescent Sample |
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Authors: | Warner Suzanne Moore Susan |
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Affiliation: | (1) Swinburne University of Technology, P.O. Box 218, Hawthorn, Victoria, Australia, 3122 |
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Abstract: | The purpose of the present study was to examine gender differences in the self-handicapping tendencies of a sample of 337 Australian school attending adolescents, who were aged between 15 and 19 years. Self-handicapping, as measured by the shortened Self-Handicapping Scale, was examined in relation to self-esteem, performance attributions, coping strategies, and the potential behavioral self-handicaps of reduced study hours and inefficient study habits. Girls scored significantly higher on the Self-Handicapping Scale and endorsed using emotional and illness related excuses significantly more often than boys. High self-handicapping scores independently predicted lower study hours for boys, and were associated with less efficient study for girls. Coping and attributional predictors of self-handicapping were found to be rumination, luck attribution, and poor active coping strategies for boys, and ability attributions, behavioral disengagement, instrumental support, and poor active coping strategies for girls. |
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Keywords: | self-handicapping study skills attributions |
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