Heirarchial, multidimensional creative arts self-concept

Alexander Seeshing Yeung, Dennis M. McInerney, Deirdre Russell-Bowie

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticle

    Abstract

    University students in teacher education (N = 249) responded to survey items on their self-concepts in four domains of creative arts and on 12 different skill-specific areas in the curriculum. Confirmatory factor analysis found that students distinguished well the music, visual art, dance, and drama self-concepts and the 12 skill-specific self-concepts, supporting the multidimensionality of self-concepts. Domain-specific self-concepts could be represented by a higher order creative arts factor and could also represent the skill-specific self-concepts, supporting the hierarchical relations of the skill-specific and domain- specific self-concepts. Whereas the findings provide strong support for the multidimensional nature of self-concept, there is also support for a hierarchical relation of the multiple dimensions at multiple levels of the self-concept hierarchy in the specific curriculum domain of creative arts.
    Original languageEnglish
    Number of pages9
    JournalAustralian Journal of Psychology
    Publication statusPublished - 2001

    Keywords

    • Arts
    • Study and teaching
    • Research
    • Self-perception
    • Educational psychology
    • Achievement motivation

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