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- Title
For Better or Worse? System-Justifying Beliefs in Sixth-Grade Predict Trajectories of Self-Esteem and Behavior Across Early Adolescence.
- Authors
Godfrey, Erin B.; Santos, Carlos E.; Burson, Esther
- Abstract
Scholars call for more attention to how marginalization influences the development of low-income and racial/ethnic minority youth and emphasize the importance of youth's subjective perceptions of contexts. This study examines how beliefs about the fairness of the American system (system justification) in sixth grade influence trajectories of self-esteem and behavior among 257 early adolescents (average age 11.4) from a diverse, low-income, middle school in an urban southwestern city. System justification was associated with higher self-esteem, less delinquent behavior, and better classroom behavior in sixth grade but worse trajectories of these outcomes from sixth to eighth grade. These findings provide novel evidence that system-justifying beliefs undermine the well-being of marginalized youth and that early adolescence is a critical developmental period for this process.
- Subjects
UNITED States; SOUTHWESTERN United States; SYSTEM justification theory; BELIEF &; doubt; SELF-esteem in adolescence; PSYCHOLOGY of preschool children; SIXTH grade (Education); HUMAN behavior research; SOCIAL marginality; POOR youth; POVERTY &; psychology; CHILD behavior; COMPARATIVE studies; LONGITUDINAL method; RESEARCH methodology; MEDICAL cooperation; RESEARCH; RESEARCH funding; SELF-perception; SOCIAL skills; TEENAGERS' conduct of life; EVALUATION research
- Publication
Child Development, 2019, Vol 90, Issue 1, p180
- ISSN
0009-3920
- Publication type
journal article
- DOI
10.1111/cdev.12854