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Gender differences in the relationship between academic Self-Concept and Self-Reported depressed mood in school children
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Gender differences in the relationship between academic Self-Concept and Self-Reported depressed mood in school children

Derek H. Berg and Don A. Klinger
Sex roles, Vol.61(7-8), pp.501-509
2009

Abstract

Psychology Psychology, Developmental Psychology, Social Social Sciences Women's Studies
In light of literature highlighting gender differences related to academic self-concept and depressed mood, this study explored the contributions of academic self-concept in individual subject areas to self-reported depressed mood in 86 elementary-age boys and girls from a province in central Canada. Results indicated that academic self-concept explained 68% and 62% of the variance in self-reported depressed mood for boys and girls, respectively. Separate analyses conducted for boys and girls indicated disparate predictive models that cohered with gender stereotypic self-perceptions: math for boys and reading for girls. Interestingly, physical education emerged as a significant contributor for boys and girls. Results are discussed in terms of the importance of addressing the relationship between children's social-emotional self-perceptions and academic self-concept within domain-specific lenses.

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
Citation topics
6 Social Sciences
6.24 Psychiatry & Psychology
6.24.15 Parenting and Child Development
Web Of Science research areas
Psychology, Developmental
Psychology, Social
Women's Studies
ESI research areas
Psychiatry/Psychology
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