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Self-Control as a Personality Resource: Assessment and Associations with Performance, Persistence and Well-Being
Author(s) -
Т.О. Гордеева,
Evgeny Osin,
Dmitry D. Suchkov,
Тетяна Іванова,
О.А. Сычев,
В. В. Бобров
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
cultural-historical psychology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.261
H-Index - 3
eISSN - 2224-8935
pISSN - 1816-5435
DOI - 10.17759/chp.2016120205
Subject(s) - psychology , conscientiousness , persistence (discontinuity) , personality , self control , coping (psychology) , hardiness (plants) , social psychology , big five personality traits , developmental psychology , extraversion and introversion , clinical psychology , geotechnical engineering , biology , cultivar , horticulture , engineering
Self-control is one’s ability to control one’s own behavior and emotional expression, to react to external events in a deliberate manner, and to interrupt actions motivated by undesirable impulses or affects. We present two studies aimed to validate a Russian-language version of the 13-item Brief Self-Control Scale by J.P. Tangney, R.F. Baumeister and A.L. Boone in samples of employees (N=591) and students (N=328). Confirmatory factor analysis supported a one-dimensional structure. The scale shows high internal consistency (alpha 0,79-0,84) and predictable associations with self-report and objective indicators of current and future academic and work performance. Self-control is positively associated with positive functioning (i.e., intrinsic motivation, goal-setting, persistence, conscientiousness, hardiness, productive coping strategies, optimistic attributional style, self-efficacy), emotional stability, and subjective well-being. These associations hold when social desirability is controlled. The results suggest that self-control is an important personality and motivational resource which results in higher performance and psychological well-being.

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