The Relationships of Self-esteem, Attitudes, and Gender to Achievement in Writing: Bahir Dar University First Year Students in Focus

Authors

  • Bekele Birhanie Assistant Professor, English Departmen

Abstract

The study examined the relationships of self-esteem, attitudes, and
gender to achievements in writing. It also explored gender differences in the
variables treated. For the study, 272 participants were selected using multistage
and purposive sampling techniques. To gather data, different scales and tests were
used. Parametric tests such as t-test, Pearson Product Moment Correlation
Coefficient, and multiple regressions were the major statistical techniques applied
to analyze the data. The results revealed that male students surpass female
students in all the variables treated. It was also found that the relationships of most
of the variables were significant except for the non-significant relationships of
writing self-esteem and writing attitude to global self-esteem and academic selfesteem to writing self-esteem. Moreover, the output of the multiple regressions
showed that the predictor variables in combination account for 40% of the variances
in writing achievement. Writing self-esteem and writing attitudes were found to be
the best predictors among the independent variables. The findings seem to suggest
that attention be paid to the correlates of students' writing skills.

Published

2021-02-21