Descriptor
Failure | 38 |
Helplessness | 38 |
Attribution Theory | 20 |
Motivation | 11 |
Success | 10 |
Locus of Control | 9 |
Psychological Patterns | 9 |
Self Concept | 9 |
Expectation | 8 |
Performance Factors | 8 |
Elementary Secondary Education | 7 |
More ▼ |
Source
Author
Dweck, Carol S. | 5 |
Diener, Carol I. | 2 |
Au, Chung-park | 1 |
Balk, David | 1 |
Bardwell, Rebecca | 1 |
Boersma, Frederic, J. | 1 |
Brophy, Jere | 1 |
Butkowsky, Irwin S. | 1 |
Crosser, Sandra | 1 |
Cullen, Joy L. | 1 |
Farmer, Helen S. | 1 |
More ▼ |
Publication Type
Education Level
Audience
Researchers | 6 |
Practitioners | 4 |
Students | 1 |
Teachers | 1 |
Location
United Kingdom | 1 |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating

Koegel, Robert L.; Mentis, Michelle – Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry and Allied Disciplines, 1985
Research suggests that motivation of autistic children can be increased and that this may be a crucial variable in the acquisition, generalization, and maintenance of their treatment gains. Discussion focuses on effects of failure on motivation, learned helplessness, shared control and increased success, and strategies for increasing exposure to…
Descriptors: Autism, Communication Problems, Failure, Helplessness

Au, Chung-park – Chinese University Education Journal, 1995
Introduces the concept of learned hopelessness, with special attention on its development from the helplessness theory of depression, and its application to studies of achievement motivation. Highlights conceptual and assessment issues that arise in researching learned hopelessness and achievement motivation. (DSK)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Depression (Psychology), Failure, Helplessness

Miller, Arden – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1986
Two experiments show that performance impairment after failure can occur in different ways, depending on the goals, values, self-perception, sex, presence of an observer, and other attributional tendencies of the individual responding to that failure. (JAZ)
Descriptors: Failure, Grade 7, Helplessness, Junior High Schools

Bardwell, Rebecca – Journal of Experimental Education, 1984
The motivational effects of failure were investigated. Students worked perceptual judgment problems, receiving varying levels of failure feedback on their work on unsolvable problems. Subjects assessed their success or failure at the task. Those who believed they had failed scored higher on a subsequent set of similar, but solvable, problems.…
Descriptors: Academic Failure, Evaluative Thinking, Failure, Feedback

Hagan, Margaret L.; Medway, Frederick J. – Journal of Educational Research, 1989
Results from an experimental study involving 120 third, seventh, and eleventh grade parochial school girls showed that for third-grade females, short-term failure experiences are relatively transitory; however for females around the age of adolescence, helplessness and egotism appear to undertake a significant role in influencing behavior. (IAH)
Descriptors: Behavior Development, Comparative Analysis, Elementary Secondary Education, Failure
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
Jankovic, Irwin N.; And Others – 1983
The view that humans fail to solve certain types of problems because they are helpless and passive originated from a series of studies with animals; subsequent research attempted to replicate the findings of the learned helplessness behavior with humans. In an attempt to replicate and extend the Hiroto and Seligman (1975) study of humans exposed…
Descriptors: College Students, Failure, Helplessness, Higher Education
Kloosterman, Peter – 1985
Learned helplessness is a variable which has commonly been considered in research on sex-related differences in mathematics achievement. In this study, learned helplessness has been defined in terms of a debilitating or facilitating response resulting from failure on mathematical word problems. The construct has been called Performance Following…
Descriptors: Algebra, Failure, Females, Helplessness

Diener, Carol I.; Dweck, Carol S. – Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1978
Two studies examined the cognitive-motivational differences between helpless and mastery-oriented children by analyzing the effects of failure feedback on problem solving strategies during testing and identifying semantic differences in children's verbalizations following failure on task. Subjects were fifth graders of both sexes. (CM)
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Elementary School Students, Failure, Helplessness
Leggett, Ellen L.; Dweck, Carol S. – 1987
Individual differences in same-aged children's reasoning about effort and ability, as well as the consequences of different forms of reasoning in actual achievement situations, were investigated. It was hypothesized that different forms of children's reasoning would be related to different (helpless versus mastery-oriented) motivational patterns.…
Descriptors: Ability, Adolescents, Attribution Theory, Cognitive Development
Frankel, Arthur; Snyder, Mel L. – 1987
The reluctance of depressed people to try hard may result not from their low expectancy for success, as Learned Helplessness Theory suggests, but rather from egotistic motivation to preserve whatever self-esteem they still have. Two studies were conducted using a paradigm which permitted a direct comparison of Learned Helplessness Theory and…
Descriptors: Achievement, Attribution Theory, College Students, Depression (Psychology)

Cullen, Joy L.; Boersma, Frederic, J. – Contemporary Educational Psychology, 1982
Untrained normal achievers attributed failure to adoption of specific task strategies, while untrained learning disabled boys attributed failure to task difficulty. Characteristics of learned helplessness were apparent in the impaired performance of the learning-disabled boys. Normal achievers appeared to have developed active and independent…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Coping, Failure, Grade 4
Swidler, Phyllis Joy; Diener, Carol I. – 1983
A study was made to determine whether there exists a group of overpersisting children who are considered mastery-oriented because of their persistence but who actually demonstrate characteristics of learned helplessness. Subjects were 71 females and 84 males from fourth-, fifth-, and sixth-grade classrooms. Children's scores on the Intellectual…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Difficulty Level, Elementary School Students, Expectation

And Others; Dweck, Carol S. – Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1980
Two experiments were conducted to examine the role of sex differences in learned helplessness in the generalization of failure experience. Subjects in experiment 1 were fifth graders and subjects in experiment 2 were fourth, fifth, and sixth graders. (MP)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Attribution Theory, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students

Richards, Barbara M. – British Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 2000
Explores the experience of psychotherapists (N=100) working with suicidal patients. Findings indicate that suicidal patients can evoke intense feelings within the therapist. Commonly mentioned responses include feelings of hopelessness and helplessness and a sense of failure. Outlines measures vital to the support of therapists and discusses the…
Descriptors: Client Characteristics (Human Services), Counselor Attitudes, Counselor Client Relationship, Counselor Role