Global and domain‐specific self‐esteem from middle childhood to early adolescence: Co‐developmental trajectories and directional relations

Author:

Gong Xue123,Zheng Jiamin2,Zhou Jianhua2,Huebner E. Scott4,Tian Lili1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Center for Studies of Psychological Application South China Normal University Guangzhou People's Republic of China

2. School of Psychology South China Normal University Guangzhou People's Republic of China

3. Department of Psychology, Normal College Qingdao University Qingdao People's Republic of China

4. Department of Psychology University of South Carolina Columbia South Carolina USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveThe study used both person‐centered (i.e., parallel process latent class growth modeling) and variable‐centered (i.e., random intercept cross‐lagged panel modeling) approaches to examine developmental changes in global and domain‐specific self‐esteem from middle childhood to early adolescence.MethodA total of 715 Chinese youth participated (54.3% boys; 45.7% girls; Mage = 9.96; SD = 0.51) in a 6‐wave longitudinal study with 6‐month intervals.ResultsParallel process latent class growth modeling identified three co‐developmental trajectories of global and domain‐specific self‐esteem: Congruent high increasing and then flattening global and domain‐specific self‐esteem, congruent moderate domain‐specific self‐esteem with convex global self‐esteem, and congruent low with concave appearance and global self‐esteem. Results from random intercept cross‐lagged panel modeling found reciprocal within‐person associations between academic self‐esteem and global self‐esteem; global self‐esteem significantly predicted social self‐esteem, while physical appearance self‐esteem significantly predicted global self‐esteem.ConclusionEvidence was provided for top‐down and bottom‐up effects of self‐esteem among Chinese youth. The findings provided new insight into the development of self‐esteem in youth.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Social Psychology

Reference90 articles.

1. Global Self-Esteem, Appearance Satisfaction, and Self-Reported Dieting in Early Adolescence

2. Academic procrastination as a product of low self‐esteem: A mediational role of academic self‐efficacy;Batool S. S.;Pakistan Journal of Psychological Research,2017

3. Trajectories of global self-esteem development during adolescence

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