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School Alienation and Academic Achievement: The Role of Learned Helplessness and Mastery Orientation
Buzzai, Caterina; Sorrenti, Luana; Tripiciano, Federica; Orecchio, Susanna; Filippello, Pina – School Psychology, 2021
School alienation is a complex phenomenon that has recently attracted considerable attention from psychologists because of the negative consequences that may result from it, such as poor academic performance, learning difficulties, school disengagement, behavioral problems, and withdrawal from the educational system, which interfere with students'…
Descriptors: Alienation, Academic Achievement, Academic Persistence, Helplessness
Wolf, Fredric M.; Savickas, Mark L. – 1981
Recent work in attribution theory has shown the importance of not only the distinction between beliefs in internal and external causes, but also between relatively fixed, stable causes and those more unstable and subject to change. The relationships of causal attributions for success and failure in achievement and social affiliation with…
Descriptors: Ability, Achievement, Adolescents, Attribution Theory

Parsons, Jacquelynne Eccles – Sex Roles: A Journal of Research, 1982
Over 300 students assessed their causal attributions and expectations for success and failure in mathematics, and their self concepts of math ability. Results varied, depending on research method employed, but did not when taken together support the hypothesis that girls are more learned helpless in mathematics than are boys. (Author/GC)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Attribution Theory, Children, Elementary Secondary Education