Secondary school coeducation and the fear of success and failure. 1973.

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Secondary school coeducation and the fear of success and failure. 1973.

This study was undertaken to provide evidence confirming the test-retest reliability and construct validity of a new empirically derived scoring system for fear of success. The first test session occurred while male and female students were attending separate coordinate secondary schools. The second test session occurred at the end of the first semester, after the merging of the two schools into a coeducational institution. A total of 39 male and 52 female 9th to 11th grade students completed both sets of instruments. Fear of success, fear of failure, and verbal performance were assessed at each test session, and students were asked to fill out a brief questionnaire which asked, among other things, how they felt about coeducation. To measure fear of success, participants were asked to write projective stories to three verbal cues. Fear of failure was measured by the Achievement Anxiety Test, and verbal performance was assessed by two highly correlated pencil tasks taken from Horner (The Generation Anagram and Scrambled Word Task). Computer-accessible data and the completed instruments are available, with the exception of the Haber-Alpert Achievement Anxiety Test. Follow-up data collected by Zeitlin are also available at the Murray Center (see Zeitlin, A550). Follow-up is possible with the collaboration of the original researcher and permission of the school.

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Shinn, Marybeth

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Radcliffe College. Henry A. Murray Research Center

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The Henry A. Murray Research Center of Radcliffe College, (formerly the Radcliffe Data Resource and Research Center, 1976-1979) was founded by Radcliffe College in 1976 as a national repository for social science data on the changing life experiences of American women, and to sponsor scholarly research on the impact of social change on women's lives. From the description of Records of the Henry A. Murray Research Center, 1976-1988 (inclusive). (Harvard University). WorldCat record id...