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      Self-Concept Clarity in Adolescents and Parents: A Six-Wave Longitudinal and Multi-Informant Study on Development and Intergenerational Transmission : Development and Transmission of Self-Concept Clarity

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          Gender differences in self-esteem: a meta-analysis.

          Two analyses were conducted to examine gender differences in global self-esteem. In analysis I, a computerized literature search yielded 216 effect sizes, representing the testing of 97,121 respondents. The overall effect size was 0.21, a small difference favoring males. A significant quadratic effect of age indicated that the largest effect emerged in late adolescence (d = 0.33). In Analysis II, gender differences were examined using 3 large, nationally representative data sets from the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES). All of the NCES effect sizes, which collectively summarize the responses of approximately 48,000 young Americans, indicated higher male self-esteem (ds ranged from 0.04 to 0.24). Taken together, the 2 analyses provide evidence that males score higher on standard measures of global self-esteem than females, but the difference is small. Potential reasons for the small yet consistent effect size are discussed.
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            Interpreting effect sizes when controlling for stability effects in longitudinal autoregressive models: Implications for psychological science

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              On the progression and stability of adolescent identity formation: a five-wave longitudinal study in early-to-middle and middle-to-late adolescence.

              This study examined identity development in a 5-wave study of 923 early-to-middle and 390 middle-to-late adolescents thereby covering the ages of 12-20. Systematic evidence for identity progression was found: The number of diffusions, moratoriums, and searching moratoriums (a newly obtained status) decreased, whereas the representation of the high-commitment statuses (2 variants of a [fore]closed identity: "early closure" and "closure," and achievement) increased. We also found support for the individual difference perspective: 63% of the adolescents remained in the same identity status across the 5 waves. Identity progression was characterized by 7 transitions: diffusion→moratorium, diffusion→early closure, moratorium→closure, moratorium→achievement, searching moratorium→closure, searching moratorium→achievement, and early closure→achievement. © 2010 The Authors. Child Development © 2010 Society for Research in Child Development, Inc.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Personality
                J Pers
                Wiley
                00223506
                October 2016
                October 2016
                May 29 2015
                : 84
                : 5
                : 580-593
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Utrecht University
                [2 ]University of Bologna
                [3 ]VU University Amsterdam
                [4 ]Tilburg University
                Article
                10.1111/jopy.12181
                25952274
                668ccdae-5893-4ae3-8072-49050e3345fb
                © 2015

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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