Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Culture" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Mechanistic insights of plant-microbe interactions for enhancing the growth and productivity of plants under salt stress conditions for agricultural sustainability Sharma B; Negi R; Jyothi SR; Gupta A; Jhamta S; Yadav N; Kaur N; Puri P; Thakur SS; Bagavathiappan S; Thakur N; Shreaz S; Madouh TA; Yadav AN; 41245209
BIOLOGY
2 An analytical framework to decode socioeconomic interplays in pesticides and fertilizer container collection patterns using land dynamics metrics Chowdhury R; Karimi N; Xu X; An C; Gitifar A; Ng KTW; 40795518
ENCS
3 Unraveling "Feeling Bad" in a Non-Western Culture: Achievement Emotions in Japanese Medical Students Nomura O; Sunohara M; Akatsu H; Wiseman J; Lajoie SP; 40625926
PSYCHOLOGY
4 Developmental exposure to the physical and social world and responses to risk among college students from four cultural contexts Chentsova-Dutton Y; Gürcan-Yildirim D; Wu J; Zakharov I; Ryder AG; 40147255
CONCORDIA
5 Agriculture s impact on water-energy balance varies across climates Zaerpour M; Hatami S; Ballarin AS; Papalexiou SM; Pietroniro A; Nazemi A; 40096605
ENCS
6 "We don't do any of these things because we are a death-denying culture": Sociocultural perspectives of Black and Latinx cancer caregivers Nwakasi C; Esiaka D; Nweke C; Chidebe RCW; Villamar W; de Medeiros K; 39327878
SOCANTH
7 An Ecological Approach to Conceptual Thinking in Material Engagement Alessandroni N; Malafouris L; Gallagher S; 39118997
CONCORDIA
8 A Public Health Ethics Case for Mitigating Zoonotic Disease Risk in Food Production Bernstein J; Dutkiewicz J; 33997264
SOCANTH
9 Nourishing the Nexus: A Feminist Analysis of Gender, Nutrition and Agri-food Development Policies and Practices Vercillo S; Rao S; Ragetlie R; Vansteenkiste J; 37361474
SOCANTH
10 The impact of cultural identity, parental communication, and peer influence on substance use among Indigenous youth in Canada Reynolds A; Keough MT; Blacklock A; Tootoosis C; Whelan J; Bomfim E; Mushquash C; Wendt DC; O' Connor RM; Burack JA; 37796930
PSYCHOLOGY
11 Gender and contextual variations in self-perceived cognitive competence Kuzyk O; Gendron A; Lopez LS; Bukowski WM; 36405181
PSYCHOLOGY
12 Rethinking microbial infallibility in the metagenomics era O' Malley MA; Walsh DA; 34160589
BIOLOGY
13 The Epistemology of Evolutionary Psychology Offers a Rapprochement to Cultural Psychology Gad Saad 33224071
JMSB

 

Title:Gender and contextual variations in self-perceived cognitive competence
Authors:Kuzyk OGendron ALopez LSBukowski WM
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36405181/
DOI:10.3389/fpsyg.2022.919870
Publication:Frontiers in psychology
Keywords:childhoodcognitive competenceculturegendersocioeconomic factors
PMID:36405181 Category: Date Added:2022-11-21
Dept Affiliation: PSYCHOLOGY
1 Department of Psychology, Concordia University, Montréal, QC, Canada.
2 Department of Education, Universidad del Norte, Barranquilla, Colombia.

Description:

School performance and cognitive competence can be conceptualized as social and relational constructs. Thus, we expect their association to vary as a function of other socially-embedded variables which have proven meaningful in the academic domain. The present study takes a critical theory approach to assess gender-related and contextual variability in the association between peer-assessed school performance and self-perceived cognitive competence. The sample consisted of 719 preadolescents (M age = 9.5 years, range = 9 to 12.5 years) living in lower- and upper-middle-class neighborhoods in Montreal, Canada and Barranquilla, Columbia. Multigroup comparisons revealed that (a) peer-assessed school competence was more strongly associated with self-perceived cognitive competence for upper-middle-class than lower-middle-class participants from Barranquilla, whereas the opposite pattern was observed with Montreal participants, and (b) that the association between communal orientation and self-perceived cognitive competence was stronger for girls than for boys across the sample, especially in the upper-middle-class school in Montreal. These findings highlight the nuanced degree of gender differences in preadolescents' perceived academic competence and emphasize the role of SES in shaping self-perceptions.





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