6533b85bfe1ef96bd12bbdf0
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Personal goal orientations and subjective well-being of adolescents
Elina MarttinenKatariina Salmela-arosubject
Time perspective4. Educationmedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesLife satisfaction050109 social psychologyBurnoutDevelopmental psychologyDeci-0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesSubjective well-beingBasic needsPsychologySocial psychologyCompetence (human resources)General PsychologyAutonomy050104 developmental & child psychologymedia_commondescription
The present study examines the types of orientation that can be identified according to the personal goals of adolescents, and how these orientations differ in their subjective well-being. In the context of the person-oriented approach, 1144 17-year-olds (565 girls, 579 boys) filled in the revised Little's personal project analysis, school burnout, depression, life satisfaction, and self-esteem inventories. Four goal orientations emerged from this data with cluster analysis: (1) property (40%), (2) vocation (24%), (3) social relationships and future education (23%), and (4) self-focused (13%) orientations. Boys were the majority in the property and the vocation orientations, whereas girls dominated in the social relationships and future education- and the self-orientations. Those in the self-orientation group were the most burned out, had most symptoms of depression and the lowest life satisfaction and self-esteem compared with other orientations. Orientations indicate the basic needs for competence (property and vocation orientations), relatedness (social relationships and future education orientation) and autonomy (self-focused orientation) (Deci & Ryan, 2000). The time perspective is addressed on the basis of goal orientations reflecting the past (self-ruminating goals), the present (relationships and current education) or the future (upcoming education and wealth).
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2012-05-14 | Japanese Psychological Research |