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Correlations of self-esteem with academic competencies: Gender variations

Journal: International Journal of Networks and Systems (IJNS) (Vol.9, No. 6)

Publication Date:

Authors : ;

Page : 1-8

Keywords : Academic results; Corollary links; Gender; Perception of competence; Self-esteem.;

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Abstract

The goal of this studyto assess, with validated instruments, the corollary links between students' academic results and the nature of their perceptions of their skills and self-esteem.For accomplish this study, we have tested it on 255 student volunteers with an average age of 21 years (91 female students and 164 male students).We opted with twotypes of surveys:A questionnaire(SEQ) developed by Duclos. B., whichmeasures self-esteem in five domains. Then a questionnaire on the perception of competence on three Domains of training (oral skills, written skills and physical practice skills).The Pearson correlation coefficient (r) is used to assess the intensity of the relationship betweenparameters.The data were processed with SPSS (26). The significance level is set to p < 0.05.These variables combined in the synthesis of the results, confirm the initial hypothesis, that there is a correlation but only between a few domains of self-esteem, sense of competence and academic results obtained.Indeed, students in this branch of education have a negative perception of their "academic" and "physical" self-esteem when their academic performance is modest or low. On theother hand, the domains of family, social and overall self-esteem are not influenced despite modest academic achievement. The result is that even though students display a low sense of competence in the face of modest results during training, their self-esteem in the "family and social" domains stays stable with good scores.

Last modified: 2020-11-28 23:16:42