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PARENTS,PEERS, PERCEIVED PRESSURE,AND ADOLESCENT SELF-CONCEPT: IS A DAUGHTER A DAUGHTER ALL OF HER LIFE?
Authors:Arlene Eskilson  Mary Glenn Wiley
Institution:Lake Forest College;University of Illinois at Chicago
Abstract:Data collected in 1981 from 316 high-SES junior and senior high students suggest support for traditional perspectives regarding sex-differentiated self-esteem. While a significant proportion of the variance in self-esteem level is predicted by perceived approval and support from family for both girls and boys in junior high school, high school females and males drawn from the same community differ substantially. Cues of family approval continue to predict a large proportion of the variance in high school girls' self-concept, but are no longer significant for high school boys. Acceptance by friends is an important element for males at all school levels, and accounts for a small but significant proportion of the variance in high school but not junior high school girls' self-esteem scores. Daughters may not "be daughters' all of their lives, but our data suggest that young females still going to school and living at home are much more dependent on family approval and support than are young males in the same situation.
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