Self-Esteem Among Children in Grade R in an Urban South African School

This paper presents the first assessment of the Behavioural Rating Scale of Presented Self-Esteem (Haltiwanger, 1989) in South Africa. The analyses are based on teachers’ evaluation of self-esteem of 57 young isiZulu and Sesotho-speaking children attending a South African government-funded urban pri...

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Main Authors: Anita Keller, Manfred Max Bergman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2012-12-01
Series:South African Journal of Childhood Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://sajce.co.za/index.php/sajce/article/view/18
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spelling doaj-a323425965574d7fae89d3930c8090702021-02-02T06:38:09ZengAOSISSouth African Journal of Childhood Education2223-76742223-76822012-12-0122e1e1110.4102/sajce.v2i2.1812Self-Esteem Among Children in Grade R in an Urban South African SchoolAnita KellerManfred Max BergmanThis paper presents the first assessment of the Behavioural Rating Scale of Presented Self-Esteem (Haltiwanger, 1989) in South Africa. The analyses are based on teachers’ evaluation of self-esteem of 57 young isiZulu and Sesotho-speaking children attending a South African government-funded urban primary school. Although we found Cronbach’s Alpha to be very high (α = .96), an exploratory factor analysis revealed a possible two-factor solution. However, the second factor did not match the two-factor solution reported in previous research (Fuchs-Beauchamp, 1996) and explained only a small amount of total variance. No self-esteem differences were detected between boys and girls, or between isiZulu- and Sesotho-speakers. The association between subjective summary ratings of self-esteem by teachers and the PSE scores in Soweto matches the associations measured in the US by Haltiwanger (1989). Interestingly, teachers’ subjective assessment of children’s future leadership status correlated positively with evaluation of the children’s self-esteem, while teachers’ subjective assessment of being burdened by major problems in the children’s future did not. Measurement issues relating to ecological validity, culture-sensitivity, and subsequent work on self-esteem of children and education in South Africa are discussed.https://sajce.co.za/index.php/sajce/article/view/18Behavioural rating scale of presented self-esteem, Soweto panel research programme, young school children
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anita Keller
Manfred Max Bergman
spellingShingle Anita Keller
Manfred Max Bergman
Self-Esteem Among Children in Grade R in an Urban South African School
South African Journal of Childhood Education
Behavioural rating scale of presented self-esteem, Soweto panel research programme, young school children
author_facet Anita Keller
Manfred Max Bergman
author_sort Anita Keller
title Self-Esteem Among Children in Grade R in an Urban South African School
title_short Self-Esteem Among Children in Grade R in an Urban South African School
title_full Self-Esteem Among Children in Grade R in an Urban South African School
title_fullStr Self-Esteem Among Children in Grade R in an Urban South African School
title_full_unstemmed Self-Esteem Among Children in Grade R in an Urban South African School
title_sort self-esteem among children in grade r in an urban south african school
publisher AOSIS
series South African Journal of Childhood Education
issn 2223-7674
2223-7682
publishDate 2012-12-01
description This paper presents the first assessment of the Behavioural Rating Scale of Presented Self-Esteem (Haltiwanger, 1989) in South Africa. The analyses are based on teachers’ evaluation of self-esteem of 57 young isiZulu and Sesotho-speaking children attending a South African government-funded urban primary school. Although we found Cronbach’s Alpha to be very high (α = .96), an exploratory factor analysis revealed a possible two-factor solution. However, the second factor did not match the two-factor solution reported in previous research (Fuchs-Beauchamp, 1996) and explained only a small amount of total variance. No self-esteem differences were detected between boys and girls, or between isiZulu- and Sesotho-speakers. The association between subjective summary ratings of self-esteem by teachers and the PSE scores in Soweto matches the associations measured in the US by Haltiwanger (1989). Interestingly, teachers’ subjective assessment of children’s future leadership status correlated positively with evaluation of the children’s self-esteem, while teachers’ subjective assessment of being burdened by major problems in the children’s future did not. Measurement issues relating to ecological validity, culture-sensitivity, and subsequent work on self-esteem of children and education in South Africa are discussed.
topic Behavioural rating scale of presented self-esteem, Soweto panel research programme, young school children
url https://sajce.co.za/index.php/sajce/article/view/18
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