Effects of failure on subsequent performance: The importance of self-defining goals.
Open Access
- 1 January 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Psychological Association (APA) in Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
- Vol. 70 (2) , 395-407
- https://doi.org/10.1037//0022-3514.70.2.395
Abstract
Extending R. A. Wicklund and P. M. Gollwitzer's (1982) self-completion theory, 2 experiments examined the role of self-defining goals in predicting performance effects of failure among students committed to professional goals such as becoming a physician( Experiment I) or a computer scientist (Experiment 2). Results of Experiment 1 revealed that failure on a task characterized as being relevant to students' professional self-definition led to (a) enhanced performance on a subsequent task relevant to the same self-definition and (b) impaired performance on a subsequent task unrelated to the self-definition challenged through prior failure. Experiment 2 replicated these findings. In addition, performance effects due to self-definitional failure were annulled when participants experienced intermittent social recognition for the aspired-to self-definition.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Building a practically useful theory of goal setting and task motivation: A 35-year odyssey.American Psychologist, 2002
- Reactions to self‐discrepant feedback: Feminist attitude and symbolic self‐completionEuropean Journal of Social Psychology, 1994
- The Psychology of Self-Affirmation: Sustaining the Integrity of the SelfPublished by Elsevier ,1988
- Striving for Specific Identities: The Social Reality of Self-SymbolizingPublished by Springer Nature ,1986
- Self-symbolizing and the neglect of others' perspectives.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1985
- Admission of failure and symbolic self-completion: Extending Lewinian theory.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1982
- Symbolic Self-Completion, Attempted Influence, and Self-DeprecationBasic and Applied Social Psychology, 1981
- Achievement motivation and its constructs: A cognitive modelMotivation and Emotion, 1977
- Responses to Uncontrollable Outcomes: An Integration of Reactance Theory and the Learned Helplessness ModelPublished by Elsevier ,1975