High, low, and in between: Self-esteem development from middle childhood to young adulthood

Publication date

2017-10-01

Authors

Chung, Joanne M.
Hutteman, Roos
van Aken, MarcelISNI 0000000114926849
Denissen, Jaap J.A.ORCID 0000-0002-6282-4107ISNI 0000000389377076

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

We describe self-esteem development in a German sample (N = 240, 48% female) followed longitudinally from middle childhood to young adulthood, using data spanning 20 years. Data from the Self-Perception Profile for Children (Harter, 1985) and the Self-Description Questionnaire III (Marsh & O'Neill, 1985) were linked using item response theory methods. Rank-order stability was high in middle childhood, low in adolescence, and highest in young adulthood. Mean-levels were relatively high in middle childhood, decreased into adolescence, but increased into young adulthood. Early childhood shyness and aggressiveness as rated by parents, teachers, and observers did not influence the self-esteem trajectory. We provide the first longitudinal evidence for the self-esteem trajectory from middle childhood to young adulthood, replicating and extending previous findings.

Keywords

Aggressiveness, Item response theory, Longitudinal, Self-esteem, Shyness, Taverne, Social Psychology, General Psychology

Citation

Chung, J M, Hutteman, R, van Aken, M A G & Denissen, J J A 2017, 'High, low, and in between : Self-esteem development from middle childhood to young adulthood', Journal of Research in Personality, vol. 70, pp. 122-133. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jrp.2017.07.001