Do people's self-views matter? Self-concept and self-esteem in everyday life.
The University of Texas at Austin
Abstract
Recent scholars have dismissed the utility of self-esteem as well as programs designed to improve it. The authors challenge these contentions on conceptual, methodological, and empirical grounds. They begin by proposing that the scope of recent analyses has been overly narrow and should be broadened to include specific as well as global self-views. Using this conceptualization, the authors place recent critiques in historical context, recalling that similarly skeptical commentaries on global attitudes and traits inspired theorizing and empirical research that subsequently restored faith in the value of both constructs. Specifically, they point to 3 strategies for attaining more optimistic assessments of the…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 136.75
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 107
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Conceptualization
- Psychology
- Social psychology
- Context (archaeology)
- Self-esteem
- Empirical research
- Skepticism
- Matching (statistics)