1984
DOI: 10.1037/0022-0663.76.1.159
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Controversies or consistencies? A reply to Brown and Weiner.

Abstract: In the preceding article, Brown and Weiner identified several presumed controversies concerning the affective consequences of effort and ability ascriptions in success and failure. In this rejoinder, we attempt to resolve areas of apparent conflict and to offer a broad synthesis around the self-worth theory of achievement motivation. Attribution and self-worth theories focus on different yet compatible aspects of achievement affect. The former theory focuses on the moral-like (guilt) consequences of not trying… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1

Citation Types

8
51
0
5

Year Published

1986
1986
2001
2001

Publication Types

Select...
5
3

Relationship

0
8

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 42 publications
(64 citation statements)
references
References 17 publications
8
51
0
5
Order By: Relevance
“…It is worth noting, however, that McNabb (1983) in a recent study also found a trend which indicated teachers judge student affect but not future performance to be more positive under effort in contrast to strategy attributions. The controversies on the affective consequences of effort and ability Covington and Omelich, 1984;Weiner and Brown, 1984) may be further complicated by the addition of strategy attributions. In any event, it would seem that affect has been and will continue to be more difficult to predict from attributions than are future performance expectations or attitude.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…It is worth noting, however, that McNabb (1983) in a recent study also found a trend which indicated teachers judge student affect but not future performance to be more positive under effort in contrast to strategy attributions. The controversies on the affective consequences of effort and ability Covington and Omelich, 1984;Weiner and Brown, 1984) may be further complicated by the addition of strategy attributions. In any event, it would seem that affect has been and will continue to be more difficult to predict from attributions than are future performance expectations or attitude.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…A lack of ability has been recognized repeatedly as eliciting shame (Covington & Omelich, 1984;Weiner, 1985). In sum, any behaviour that leads people to think that they have behaved incompetently or incoherently and that important other persons might consider them to be incompetent or incoherent provokes shame.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Bien que les rtsultats ci-dessus ne permettent pas de resoudre la controverse concernant les liens qui existent entre les attributions causales et les affects, il semble toutefois que ces liens ne soient pas aussi intangibles qu'on a pu le considerer initialement (Brown & Weiner, 1984;Covington & Omelich, 1984;Nicholls, 1976). Ainsi, une information de competence mene-t-elle chez les adolescents a une inference d'effort eleve et de faible culpabilite lorsque la comprehension d'un texte constitue la finalite d'un apprentissage, alors qu'une information d'incompetence conduit a une inference d'effort faible et de forte culpabilite.…”
Section: Discussionunclassified
“…Dans les conditions d'implication de l'Ego, comme une perception de competence elevee mene a une inference d'effort faible, les sujets rapportent a la fois des sentiments de fierte et de culpabilite. A I'inverse, et dans les mCmes conditions d'implication de l'Ego, une perception de competence faible mene a une inference d'effort eleve et s'associe respectivement a des sentiments d'embarras et de moindre culpabilite (Covington & Omelich, 1984;Jagacinski & Nicholls, 1984). Le second objectif du present travail consiste donc a vkrifier dans des situations reelles (i.e.…”
unclassified