Abstract

This large-scale cross-sectional study had the aim to investigate whether adolescent males and females differ in self-perceived self-regulation. The large sample size allowed us to investigate sex differences in three age-groups of young (n = 161), middle (n = 133) and late (n = 159) adolescents. Self-regulation was evaluated with a self-report questionnaire, the Amsterdam Executive Functioning Inventory (AEFI). This questionnaire gives a proxi for three executive functions that are important for proper self-regulation: (1) self-control & self-monitoring, (2) attention, and (3) planning & initiative taking. Results revealed clear sex differences in the self-regulation as perceived by mid-adolescents (i.e., 13–16 years). In this age period, females evaluated their attention higher than males, and they reported higher levels of self-control & self-monitoring. Our findings offer important new insights with respect to the decision making, academic achievements and behaviour of 13-16-year olds. Self-regulation is known to have a central role in academic achievement and in behavioural organisation. The sex differences in self-regulation in mid-adolescence may therefore explain part of the difference which males and females in this age-group exhibit in academic achievements and behavioural organisations. The results imply that self-regulation may be a relevant intervention target: rather than focussing on changing behaviour, interventions may focus more on self-insights and thereby changing the adolescent’s perceptions about their behaviour. Increased self-insight may have the potency to actually change behaviour, which might be an interesting target for future investigation.

Highlights

  • Self-regulation is a neuropsychological skill, which continues to develop from infancy through childhood into late adolescence

  • analyses of variances (ANOVAs) were performed with age group and sex as independent variables and the four outcome measures of the Amsterdam Executive Functioning Inventory (AEFI) as dependent variables

  • If the analyses revealed a significant main effect of age group on any of the outcome measures, additional one-way ANOVAs were performed to investigate the differences between the three age groups : Mean of age group 1 was compared to mean of age group 2 and mean of age group 2 was compared to mean of age group 3

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Self-regulation is a neuropsychological skill, which continues to develop from infancy through childhood into late adolescence. The notion taken in the present paper is that sex differences in the pace at which self-regulation develops over the course of adolescence may contribute to these male-female differences in school performance This is substantiated by the results of our earlier studies which have reported on the importance of self-regulation to academic achievement (e.g., [7], [18], [19]). The goal of this large-scale cross-sectional study was to investigate sex differences in self-regulation in adolescence by self-report In such a study, it is imperative to control for the factor age. Any evidence for sex differences in particular periods of adolescence may offer important new insights into the underpinnings of adolescents’ daily life decisions, academic achievements and behaviour It may offer new insights with respect to applied interventions aimed at improving self-regulation skills. The focus on self-reports may offer applied implications: rather than focussing on changing behaviour, interventions may focus more on self-perceptions and thereby change the adolescent’s perceptions about their behaviour and the control which adolescents experience over their behaviour

Procedure
Participants
Results
Discussion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call