Abstract
The current study examined how the Maladaptive Evaluative Concerns (MEC) versus Positive Achievement Striving (PAS) dimensions
of perfectionism relate to anxiety, goal-setting, and cognitive appraisal in third-grade to sixth-grade students who completed
an object-naming task under three goal-demand conditions: self-set goals, and low and high experimenter goals. The results
indicated that children high on a measure of socially prescribed perfectionism (SPP; a measure of MEC) experienced more anxiety
across all conditions than children low in SPP. Children scoring high on SPP also rated performing well on the task as more
important and were more likely to say they should have performed better than their low SPP counterparts, despite no significant
differences in performance or standard-setting. The PAS component of perfectionism was unrelated to children’s responses.
These results are consistent with Beck’s cognitive theory and support the utility of the maladaptive evaluative concerns dimension
of perfectionism in predicting children’s cognitive and affective responses to new tasks.
of perfectionism relate to anxiety, goal-setting, and cognitive appraisal in third-grade to sixth-grade students who completed
an object-naming task under three goal-demand conditions: self-set goals, and low and high experimenter goals. The results
indicated that children high on a measure of socially prescribed perfectionism (SPP; a measure of MEC) experienced more anxiety
across all conditions than children low in SPP. Children scoring high on SPP also rated performing well on the task as more
important and were more likely to say they should have performed better than their low SPP counterparts, despite no significant
differences in performance or standard-setting. The PAS component of perfectionism was unrelated to children’s responses.
These results are consistent with Beck’s cognitive theory and support the utility of the maladaptive evaluative concerns dimension
of perfectionism in predicting children’s cognitive and affective responses to new tasks.
- Content Type Journal Article
- Pages 1-15
- DOI 10.1007/s10942-011-0130-8
- Authors
- Patricia Marten DiBartolo, Department of Psychology, Smith College, Clark Science Center, Northampton, MA 01063, USA
- Sara Pierotti Varner, Department of Psychology, Smith College, Clark Science Center, Northampton, MA 01063, USA
- Journal Journal of Rational-Emotive & Cognitive-Behavior Therapy
- Online ISSN 1573-6563
- Print ISSN 0894-9085