Predicting career aspirations and university majors from academic ability and self-concept: A longitudinal application of the Internal-External frame of reference model

Contribution to collected edition/anthologyResearch

Publication data


ByPhilip Parker, Gabriel Nagy, Ulrich Trautwein, Oliver Lüdtke
Original languageEnglish
Published inJacquelynne S. Eccles, Ingrid Schoon (Eds.), Gender Differences in Aspirations and Attainment: A Life Course Perspective
Pages224-246
Editor (Publisher)Cambridge University Press
ISBN978-1-107645196, 978-1-107021723, 978-1-139128933
DOI/Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781139128933.015
Publication statusPublished – 10.2014
KeywordsSociology - general interest, Developmental psychology

Science, technology, engineering, and mathematics university majors are critical pathways toward prestigious careers, yet women are still underrepresented in many of these domains. In this chapter, we review the role that self-beliefs play in the development of educational aspirations and attempts to realize those aspirations at the end of secondary school. In particular, we use the internal/external frame of reference model to explore the potential of achievement and self-concept profiles as predictors of university major aspirations and attainment as one possible explanation for gender differences in these domains. After reviewing previous research in this area, we provide a research example using a large longitudinal database from Germany (N = 1,881). Results suggest that (a) high math achievement and self-concept predicted math-intensive university major choice and lower likelihood of entering verbal-intensive majors (and vice versa); (b) there appeared to be a continuum of university majors such that strong mathematics achievement and self-concept profiles predicted entry into hard sciences, while the opposite profile predicted entry into the humanities with biology and medicine displaying more mixed patterns; and (c) after controlling for achievement and self-concept there were still important gender differences in university majors. Implications for theory and practice are discussed.