Femininity : moderator of effects of priming self-construals on females’ collective self-esteem (CSE)

Psychologists have always been intrigued with the study of the self. Decades of research have seen the conceptualisation of the self through various stages of transformation, and recently, even incorporating relevant others into the definition of one’s self-concept, according to Tajfel’s and Turner’...

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Main Author: Chan, Stephanie Jialei
Other Authors: Wan Ching
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2014
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/58568
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-585682019-12-10T11:33:29Z Femininity : moderator of effects of priming self-construals on females’ collective self-esteem (CSE) Chan, Stephanie Jialei Wan Ching School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology Psychologists have always been intrigued with the study of the self. Decades of research have seen the conceptualisation of the self through various stages of transformation, and recently, even incorporating relevant others into the definition of one’s self-concept, according to Tajfel’s and Turner’s Social Identity Theory (SIT, 1979, as cited in Tarrant, 2002, and Trepte, 2006; Turner, 1986). Naturally, new constructs, such as collective self-esteem (CSE, Crocker & Luhtanen, 1990; Luhtanen & Crocker, 1992), were developed to accommodate the new definition of one’s self-concept. Looking at the priming effects of three different self-construals – the private, relational, and the collective self-construals, this study aims to test the main hypothesis in 40 female university students, that femininity moderates the effects of priming different self-construals on one’s CSE with reference to one’s gender group (i.e., being a female) and to one’s friendship with a close female friend. Findings showed that femininity did indeed moderate the priming effects, but only in the private self condition, suggesting that there may be other variables that could account for the variance in CSE. This study brought the focus to gender role differences, rather than on gender differences, which had previously been, and still remains, the interest of researchers in the field. More work needs to be done in developing a more comprehensive explanatory framework, to allow better understanding of femininity as a moderator of the effects of priming different self-construals on females’ CSE. Keywords: Self-construals, Priming, Collective Self-esteem, Females, Femininity, Social Identity Theory. Bachelor of Arts 2014-04-08T04:17:28Z 2014-04-08T04:17:28Z 2014 2014 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/58568 en Nanyang Technological University 51 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Psychology
Chan, Stephanie Jialei
Femininity : moderator of effects of priming self-construals on females’ collective self-esteem (CSE)
description Psychologists have always been intrigued with the study of the self. Decades of research have seen the conceptualisation of the self through various stages of transformation, and recently, even incorporating relevant others into the definition of one’s self-concept, according to Tajfel’s and Turner’s Social Identity Theory (SIT, 1979, as cited in Tarrant, 2002, and Trepte, 2006; Turner, 1986). Naturally, new constructs, such as collective self-esteem (CSE, Crocker & Luhtanen, 1990; Luhtanen & Crocker, 1992), were developed to accommodate the new definition of one’s self-concept. Looking at the priming effects of three different self-construals – the private, relational, and the collective self-construals, this study aims to test the main hypothesis in 40 female university students, that femininity moderates the effects of priming different self-construals on one’s CSE with reference to one’s gender group (i.e., being a female) and to one’s friendship with a close female friend. Findings showed that femininity did indeed moderate the priming effects, but only in the private self condition, suggesting that there may be other variables that could account for the variance in CSE. This study brought the focus to gender role differences, rather than on gender differences, which had previously been, and still remains, the interest of researchers in the field. More work needs to be done in developing a more comprehensive explanatory framework, to allow better understanding of femininity as a moderator of the effects of priming different self-construals on females’ CSE. Keywords: Self-construals, Priming, Collective Self-esteem, Females, Femininity, Social Identity Theory.
author2 Wan Ching
author_facet Wan Ching
Chan, Stephanie Jialei
format Final Year Project
author Chan, Stephanie Jialei
author_sort Chan, Stephanie Jialei
title Femininity : moderator of effects of priming self-construals on females’ collective self-esteem (CSE)
title_short Femininity : moderator of effects of priming self-construals on females’ collective self-esteem (CSE)
title_full Femininity : moderator of effects of priming self-construals on females’ collective self-esteem (CSE)
title_fullStr Femininity : moderator of effects of priming self-construals on females’ collective self-esteem (CSE)
title_full_unstemmed Femininity : moderator of effects of priming self-construals on females’ collective self-esteem (CSE)
title_sort femininity : moderator of effects of priming self-construals on females’ collective self-esteem (cse)
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/58568
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