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      Factors Influencing the Development of Perfectionism in Gifted College Students

      1
      Gifted Child Quarterly
      SAGE Publications

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          Most cited references19

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          The destructiveness of perfectionism. Implications for the treatment of depression.

          S Blatt (1995)
          Reports in the public media indicate that intense perfectionism and severe self-criticism played a role in the suicide of three remarkably talented individuals. The role of perfectionism in these suicides is consistent with recent extensive investigations of aspects of perfectionism as well as further analyses of the NIMH Treatment of Depression Collaborative Research Program (TDCRP), indicating that intense perfectionism interfered significantly with therapeutic response in the various brief treatments for depression. Self-critical individuals, however, made substantial improvement in long-term intensive treatment. These findings suggest the value of considering psychopathology, especially depression, from a psychological rather than a symptomatic perspective; that different patients may be differentially responsive to various types of therapy; and that more extensive therapy may be necessary for many highly perfectionistic, self-critical patients.
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            Maternal resources, parenting practices, and child competence in rural, single-parent African American families.

            A family process model was tested that linked maternal education, maternal religiosity, and the adequacy of family financial resources to cognitive and psychosocial competence in the mothers' children. The sample included 156 6- to 9-year-old African American children living in single-mother-headed households in rural areas, 82% of whom lived in poverty. The distal variables of maternal education, maternal religiosity, and adequacy of financial resources were linked with the proximal variables of "no nonsense" parenting, mother-child relationship quality, and maternal involvement in the child's school activities. The proximal variables were, in turn, indirectly linked with children's cognitive competence, social competence, and internalizing problems through their association with the children's development of self-regulation.
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              A hierarchical structural analysis of perfectionism and its relation to other personality characteristics

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Gifted Child Quarterly
                Gifted Child Quarterly
                SAGE Publications
                0016-9862
                1934-9041
                September 16 2016
                October 2004
                September 16 2016
                October 2004
                : 48
                : 4
                : 259-274
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Ball State University
                Article
                10.1177/001698620404800402
                ca2b5ae0-0106-4a2f-9755-58feda1b06af
                © 2004

                http://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license

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