Abstract

Summary College students' (N = 50) scores on the College Self-Expression Scale and on a number of derived target-specific subscales were compared to their behavior within an unobtrusive situational test of assertive behavior with a stranger. The results indicated that the self-report of males was target specific (i. e., their claimed level of assertion vis-a-vis a stranger was related to their subsequent behavior), while their claims regarding assertion with other targets were not. None of the self-report measures for females was significantly related to subsequent behavior.

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