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A new study of more than 33,000 children in 21 countries reveals that self-rated physical appearance is the most important factor that determines children’s self-esteem, surpassing other factors such as academic competence, athletics, or peer relationships.
A new study published in the International Journal of Behavioral Development on August 10 challenges assumptions about how children worldwide develop self-esteem.
The study, a meta-analysis, synthesized data from over 33,000 children ages 8-12 across 21 countries, making it the largest analysis ever on the emergence of self-worth in middle childhood.
It reveals that. contrary to conventional wisdom, children’s feelings about their physical appearance are more strongly tied to their overall self-worth than academic competence, athletic skills, or social relationships.
The study, conduced by researchers from two Dutch universities, included children from countries spanning North America (United States, Canada), South America (Brazil, Peru), Europe (Belgium, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, Spain, United Kingdom), Asia (China), the Middle East (Lebanon, Israel, United Arab Emirates), and Africa (Ghana).
The self-evaluation measures used in the individual studies included in the meta-analysis were the Self-Perception Profile for Children (SPPC) and the Self-Description Questionnaire I (SDQ-I), which include domains such as scholastic competence, social acceptance, athletic competence, physical appearance, behavioral conduct, peer relations, parent relations, and more.
Both of these are questionnaires designed to assess children’s self-esteem.
The researchers performed a sophisticated three-level meta-analysis, synthesizing data from 141 independent samples and 584 effect sizes, totaling the remarkable sample size of over 33,000 children.
Their initial search had identified 6,960 potentially eligible studies, which were screened down to a final 93 published articles.
The study yielded several surprising insights into the emerging self-views of children worldwide.
Physical appearance self-evaluation showed the strongest correlation to overall self-esteem, with a hefty effect size of .64.
This highlights the central importance of appearance to children’s developing self-image.
Unexpectedly, compliance with moral guidelines and rules was more strongly correlated (.54) than even peer and parent relationships (.52 and .39).
Following behavioral conduct norms seems essential to self-image.
Academic competence was moderately correlated at .49, but was still significantly less tied to overall self-worth than physical looks.
Athletic competence showed the weakest correlation at .40, casting doubt on the belief that sports ability strongly determines self-worth, or that participation in athletics inherently boosts children’s self-esteem.
These patterns held constant across both individualistic and collectivistic cultures.
Self-worth appears shaped by similar forces globally, and does not differ by traditional cultural values as some hypothesized.
Interestingly, the study did not find any significant differences in the strength of the associations based on gender; the relations appeared consistent for both girls and boys.
The authors theorize several reasons why physical appearance emerges as the strongest predictor of children’s global self-worth.
Looks are highly visible to others and readily judged, unlike more internal traits like intelligence or integrity.
Appearance is also largely outside of one’s control from a young age, yet carries major social consequences in terms of peer acceptance and adult evaluations.
Additionally, modern media and culture transmit ubiquitous messages about the importance of physical attractiveness and beauty ideals.
During middle childhood, children become increasingly aware of how their appearance influences peers’ and adults’ assessments of them.
The high visibility of looks, lack of control over one’s appearance, and growing realization of its social impact likely all contribute to physical appearance becoming paramount in children’s developing self-concept.
Although physical appearance holds particular power, the study confirms that children incorporate self-assessments across multiple domains when forming their overall self-worth.
Experts emphasize the importance of nurturing competence, confidence, and esteem across diverse spheres of children’s lives.
This means providing opportunities to discover varied passions, praising effort and character rather than fixed traits, offering unconditional affection and relationships, counterbalancing intense focus on looks, and fostering a growth mindset that abilities can be developed.
Well-rounded development of self-esteem requires bolstering children’s perceptions of themselves across athletic, artistic, academic, social, moral, and other dimensions – not just hinging on appearance.
The study represents an unprecedentedly thorough investigation into the global emergence of self-worth in middle childhood.
The findings highlight the risks of overemphasizing physical appearance, and the need to help children build secure self-esteem across academic, social, moral, athletic, and artistic dimensions of life.
“Understanding these associations at the early emergence of global self-worth,” the authors write, “is crucial for comprehending self-worth development and for designing interventions and support systems that foster healthy self-worth in children.”
Study: “Children’s domain-specific self-evaluations and global self-worth: A preregistered cross-cultural meta-analysis”
Authors: Yixin Tang, Eddie Brummelman, Sheida Novin, Mark Assink, and Sander Thomaes
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/01650254231190926