A Meta-Analytic Comparison of the Self-Esteem and Behavior Problems of Stepchildren to Children in Other Family Structures

1993 ◽  
Vol 19 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 143-164 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lawrence H. Ganong ◽  
Marilyn Coleman
2004 ◽  
Vol 12 (04) ◽  
pp. 351-371 ◽  
Author(s):  
MARCO VAN GELDEREN

In the last few decades, the manner in which western society deals with death has changed under the influence of individualization processes. In this paper, directions of emerging opportunities for new products or services are pointed out that respond to this development. For this purpose, five types of heuristic information are provided and analyzed. First, background information about the market. Second, an analysis of consumer wants, problems, and behavior. Third, an analysis of the change factor that explains how wants of consumer are becoming different. Fourth, a description of innovations that already try to meet these changed wants. Fifth, conceptualizations of the market that define the market in a reframed manner. The paper concludes that the centrality of the self (and its cessation by death), the importance of expression of one's authentic personality, the diminished authority of traditional frameworks that explain death, and a want for self-esteem in response to mortality salience all give rise to opportunities for new products and services in response to individualizing manners of dealing with death.


2008 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 255-274 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cindy Patton

The author revisits the work of a research team on which she served in the early 1990s to show why researchers have difficulty recognizing that social identities are not only heterologo U.S. (referring to different objects), but also heteromorphic (formed in different ways). While activists have eventually convinced researchers that sexuality has many different contexts and meanings, most health educators apply this insight by simply increasing the number of contents possible in an identity still thought in ego-psychology terms, that is, as the integration of self-esteem, values, and a realistic assessment of behavior. The team on which the author served recognized “identity” as a combination of identification with and disidentification from various possible labels, and viewed identity as conflicted and as discursively inter-relating the “self” and institutional structures. Nevertheless, this insight could not get analytic purchase in the context of a large, positivistic contract research team. The author identifies three cases in which the dominant research conceptualizations of identity and behavior misread the situations the team was uncovering.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (02) ◽  
pp. 354-358
Author(s):  
Ignatius Topno ◽  

SelfEsteemis a central construct in clinical, developmental, personality, and social psychology.Self Esteem can be defined as an individuals judgment of his or her self-worth (Rosenberg 1965). Self Esteem is generally considered the evaluative component of the self-concept, a broader representation of the self that includes cognitive and behavioral aspects as well as evaluative or affective ones (Tomaka&Blascovich, 1991). Self Esteem creates self-image (Judy and Arin 2004). People with high self esteem take risks more easily than those with low self Esteem. Self Esteem, that is contingent on success and competence, triggers fundamentally different habitual thought and behavior patterns than contingent self Esteem, that involves seeking compensation from emotional support and acceptance. These behaviors and attitudes have in recent studies been linked to distinctive patterns of coping with social threats and differential health outcomes.It is an extremely popular construct within psychology, and has been related to virtually every other psychological concept or domain, including personality, behavioral, cognitive, and clinical concepts. It can influence life in myriad ways, from academic and professional success to relationships and mental health. On the above criteria in mind the researcher desired using mean, standard deviation t test to study the difference between the mean scores of male and female, Private and Government job holders children, age of students, type of family and finally the standard of students in their self-esteem of secondary school Tharu children of West Champaran . The result declared that there is no significant difference between the mean scores of male and female,Private and government Job holders children, single and nuclear family, whereas there is a significant difference between the mean scores of less than 14 and above 14 years and IXth and Xth Standard secondary school Tharu students in their self-esteem.


2016 ◽  
Vol 26 (3) ◽  
pp. 709-720 ◽  
Author(s):  
BreAnna L. Davis ◽  
Mia A. Smith-Bynum ◽  
Farzana T. Saleem ◽  
Tiffany Francois ◽  
Sharon F. Lambert

2016 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Miss. Amanthi Ganapathi ◽  
Dr K Karpagam

Aim: To measure the level of self esteem among the students of saveetha dental college. Objective: To measure the level of self esteem of an individual’s by inventory. Background: Self-esteem can apply specifically to particular dimension (for example: “I believe I am a good writer and feel happy about that”) or a global extent (for example, “I believe sociology and psychology, self esteem reflects a person’s overall subjective emotional evaluation of his or her own worth. In psychological literature the concept of self viewed in two ways. One in what is called the self as object. It refers to our capacity to stand outside of ourselves and to evaluate our attitude, feelings and behavior from a more or less detached point of view. Interest in the self humanity. It includes an active group of processes like thinking, remembering, perceiving, performing etc. Reason: This study is conducted to improve our aspiration towards self esteem and self worth which are considered to be the cornerstone of personality that influences the behavior of every individuals.


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