Intersections of history and culture migration and transnational identity in kirsty murrays children of the wind series
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St. Thomas College - Autonomous, University of Calicut
Abstract
Adolescence is a crucial time when social, emotional, and cognitive growth happens
quickly. This stage is further influenced by academic demands, changing personal values, and
the emotional atmosphere of their classrooms. Better quality of life and classroom atmosphere
have an impact on children’s development, which will assist them in minimizing self-
handicapping, building academic competence, creating a positive emotional environment, and
strengthening their values. Unfolding these aspects will help the child become a decent citizen.
Self-handicapping is defined as any action, assertion or performance setting that
increases the chance to externalize (or justify) failure and internalize (take credit for) success.
The study aims to determine how academic competence, perceived emotional climate, and
personal values contribute to or predict the level of self-handicapping exhibited by students. The
study was conducted among 1507 eleventh standard students selected from various districts of
Kerala by giving due representation to gender, locale of school, type of management of school,
and stream of study. Major findings were obtained through statistical techniques such as t-test,
coefficient of correlation, classificatory technique, ANOVA, and Scheffe's multiple comparison.
Students who exhibit high levels of academic competence, emotional stability, and personal
values are less likely to engage in self-handicapping behaviors. The study also discovered a
strong inverse association between self-handicapping behavior and academic competence,
perceived emotional climate, and personal values. However, those who experience emotional
climates like fear, instability, or extreme distress are more prone to use self-handicapping
techniques to safeguard their self-worth. Additionally, personal values were found to have an
impact on reducing self-handicapping behavior, especially those connected to power,
achievement, stimulation, universalism, and conformity. The variation in academic competence,
perceived emotional climate, and personal values also have significant influence on self-
handicapping. Parents should prioritize their children's emotional well-being by providing a
supportive home environment. Teachers should incorporate classroom activities with
constructive feedback, which will help students achieve better academic goals, create a positive
emotional climate, and develop desirable personal values. Furthermore, students should develop
self-awareness and positive values to effectively tackle self-handicapping strategies, which carry
significant educational implications. The study highlights the necessity for comprehensive
interventions that target the emotional, cognitive, and social dimensions of student well-being in
order to reduce self-handicapping and foster healthier academic outcomes.
