Success and Failure as Determinants of Goal-Setting Behavior in Mentally Retarded and Normal Children. Final Report [electronic resource] / Gerald E. Gruen and Sheila A. O'Donnell.

To test the hypothesis that experimentally-induced success and failure experiences would differentially affect mentally retarded and normal children, 24 educable mentally retarded children and their matched mental age (MA) and chronological age (CA) controls were given six trials on a verbal 5-item...

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Bibliographic Details
Online Access: Full Text (via ERIC)
Main Author: Gruen, Gerald E.
Corporate Author: Purdue Univ., Lafayette, IN
Other Authors: O'Donnell, Sheila A.
Format: Electronic eBook
Language:English
Published: [S.l.] : Distributed by ERIC Clearinghouse, 1969.
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Summary:To test the hypothesis that experimentally-induced success and failure experiences would differentially affect mentally retarded and normal children, 24 educable mentally retarded children and their matched mental age (MA) and chronological age (CA) controls were given six trials on a verbal 5-item vocabulary task. The subjects (Ss) were given, in counter-balanced design, three success trials (simple words) and three failure trials (difficult words). All Ss gave a prediction of performance estimate for each trial. The retarded Ss and their MA controls set higher estimates across trials than the older CA controls. The retarded Ss also set higher initial estimates. Results were interpreted as being contrary to the hypothesis that retardates have had a greater history of failure experiences resulting in lower generalized expectancy of success. (Author/RJ)
Item Description:ERIC Document Number: ED031854.
Sponsoring Agency: Office of Education (DHEW), Washington, DC. Bureau of Research.
Contract Number: OEG-0-8-070213-3699.
Physical Description:19 p.