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study reveals self-esteem inflation among US kids
Yahoo news ^ | November 9th,2001 | suzanne rostler

Posted on 11/09/2001 9:42:41 PM PST by mugwump62

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - American kids have a bloated sense of themselves, a new study suggests. According to the report, in a recent issue of Personality and Social Psychology Review, self-esteem among America's youth in general and college students in particular has been on the rise for the past 30 years. Meantime, societal indicators that these feelings are warranted, such as higher SAT scores and lower rates of teen pregnancy, have not kept pace with attitudes. To be sure, there is nothing wrong with feeling good about oneself. People with a healthy dose of self-esteem are more satisfied with life and are less likely to suffer from anxiety or depression, the authors note. But self-esteem based on nothing can set people up for disappointment, Dr. Jean Twenge of San Diego State University in California said in an interview with Reuters Health. ``They may also feel that the world owes them something,'' she added. Twenge blames the trend on the self-esteem movement in schools, which teaches children slogans and affirmations such as ``I am lovable and capable.'' However, ``it is more important that a child actually accomplishes something than that he or she have high self-esteem,'' she said. ``Once a child accomplishes something, self-esteem will follow naturally. Children should be praised, but only when the praise has a basis in fact.'' Among younger children, declining divorce, unemployment and crime rates were found to correlate with higher self-esteem. Under these circumstances, Twenge and her colleagues suggest, children grow up feeling more connected and may feel better about themselves because their parents are able to spend more time with them and can provide a better environment. ``The culture we create has an impact on our children's feelings about themselves,'' Twenge said. ``Based on these results, it is more important to change the larger society by lowering crime rates and divorce rates than to spend energy and dollars on programs designed to increase children's self-esteem,'' she and her colleagues write. The results are based on an analysis of hundreds of different studies on self-esteem conducted between 1965 and 1994. The studies included more than 105,000 children and young adults. The findings also challenge the notion that girls' self-esteem suffers more than boys' self-esteem during adolescence. In junior high school, self-esteem was found to deteriorate at similar rates. A rebound was noted among both groups in high school, although boys' self-esteem was found to recover more quickly that of girls. The gap appears to narrow in college, however. SOURCE: Personality and Social Psychology Review 2001 November.


TOPICS: Announcements; Culture/Society
KEYWORDS:
At last, someone attempting to dis-abuse the long cherished notion that it is the job of public education to teach our children how to be hedonistic self-involved narccissists. What a break through in enlightened thought to realize that it is only warranted and perhaps necessary to praise a child when the child has accomplished something worth praising. Now can we please stop rewarding screwed up kids who throw daily temper tantrums and start rewarding kids who want to learn by actually teaching them?
1 posted on 11/09/2001 9:42:41 PM PST by mugwump62
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To: mugwump62
Nonsense....my children are perfect........if they don't feel good about themselves.... then.....I'll....I'll beat it into em....
2 posted on 11/09/2001 9:56:36 PM PST by Dallas
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To: mugwump62
the most successful students tend to be the ones with the lowest self esteem... the perfectionists always are bashing themselves for doing something wrong, etc.

The bullies and the drunk jocks on the verge of being flunked out, on the other hand, really do feel good about themselves.

This is not to say that self esteem is a bad thing... just pointing out that increasing it is not necessarily a good thing. It will not usually lead to success and it will not make one happy.

This is not to say that hatred of oneself is a good thing--it isn't!

3 posted on 11/09/2001 10:09:35 PM PST by Nataku X
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To: mugwump62
According to last week's Newsweek, the Generation Y crowd has been whacked upside the head by 9/11, and generally can't handle it. Their entire ultra-entitlement worldview has been turned on its ear.

Which, of course, is a good thing.

4 posted on 11/09/2001 10:13:39 PM PST by Timesink
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To: mugwump62
We need to replace "self-esteem" with self-respect.
5 posted on 11/09/2001 10:15:54 PM PST by Tony in Hawaii
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To: Tony in Hawaii
I am in total agreement with that! This is what I try to teach my teen, and that self respect is only possible when you learn to respect others and learn to respect laws and rules that are made for your own good, not for a reason of domination or subservience to a ruler. We are truly FREE here in this republic, and the only way this will continue is if we teach our children the responsibilities that go hand in hand with freedom, not how to sit on their increasingly large butts and whine about how the rest of the world has let them down and smugly think to themselves that that is everyone else's fault, not theirs.
6 posted on 11/09/2001 10:38:49 PM PST by mugwump62
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To: mugwump62
"But self-esteem based on nothing can set people up for disappointment,"

Really? Imagine how their victims feel.

7 posted on 11/10/2001 12:06:51 AM PST by brat
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To: Nakatu X
Self-confidence is a good thing -- in the sense of having an accurate sense of your own abilities

Self-esteem in cxcess of actual ability used to be called "arrogance"

8 posted on 11/10/2001 12:13:32 AM PST by SauronOfMordor
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Comment #9 Removed by Moderator

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