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      Contingencies of Self–Worth and Depressive Symptoms in College Students

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      Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology
      Guilford Publications

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          TARGET ARTICLE: Toward a Conceptualization of Optimal Self-Esteem

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            Contingencies of self-worth.

            Research on self-esteem has focused almost exclusively on level of trait self-esteem to the neglect of other potentially more important aspects such as the contingencies on which self-esteem is based. Over a century ago, W. James (1890) argued that self-esteem rises and falls around its typical level in response to successes and failures in domains on which one has staked self-worth. We present a model of global self-esteem that builds on James' insights and emphasizes contingencies of self-worth. This model can help to (a) point the way to understanding how self-esteem is implicated in affect, cognition, and self-regulation of behavior; (b) suggest how and when self-esteem is implicated in social problems; (c) resolve debates about the nature and functioning of self-esteem; (d) resolve paradoxes in related literatures, such as why people who are stigmatized do not necessarily have low self-esteem and why self-esteem does not decline with age; and (e) suggest how self-esteem is causally related to depression. In addition, this perspective raises questions about how contingencies of self-worth are acquired and how they change, whether they are primarily a resource or a vulnerability, and whether some people have noncontingent self-esteem.
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              Contingencies of self-worth in college students: theory and measurement.

              The Contingencies of Self-Worth Scale assesses 7 sources of self-esteem in college students: academics, appearance, approval from others, competition, family support, God's love, and virtue. In confirmatory factor analyses on data from 1,418 college students, a 7-factor model fit to the data acceptably well and significantly better than several plausible alternative models. The subscales all have high internal consistency, test-retest reliability, are distinct from other personality measures, and have a simplex structure arrayed on a continuum from external to internal sources of self-esteem. Contingencies of self-worth assessed prior to college predicted how students spent their time during their 1st year of college.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology
                Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology
                Guilford Publications
                0736-7236
                June 2006
                June 2006
                : 25
                : 6
                : 628-646
                Article
                10.1521/jscp.2006.25.6.628
                4b3acdc7-4243-4dd9-a421-6454e69fa6a1
                © 2006
                History

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