Cognitive Ability and Non-Ability Trait Predictors of Academic Achievement: A Four-Year Longitudinal Study
Abstract
1. Introduction
1.1. Prediction of Academic Achievement
1.1.1. The Current Study
1.1.2. Advanced Placement Course Completion
1.2. Research Questions
2. Method
2.1. Participants
2.2. Apparatus
2.3. Student Assessments
2.4. Twelfth-Grade Ability and Domain Knowledge Assessments
3. Analysis and Results
3.1. Descriptive Statistics of Predictor and Criterion Measures
3.1.1. Ability, Knowledge Tests
3.1.2. Criterion Measures
3.1.3. Raw Correlations Between Predictors and Criteria
3.1.4. Common and Unique Criterion Variance Accounted for
4. Discussion and Conclusions
- As expected, cognitive abilities assessed in ninth grade accounted for the largest portion of individual differences variance in 12th-grade abilities, grades, and the number of elective academic (AP) courses enrolled in during secondary school.
- Non-ability trait measures, including personality traits, academically oriented vocational interests, and appetitive motivational traits assessed in ninth grade, also accounted for significant and meaningful variance in the 12th-grade criterion measures of academic achievement.
- Once individual differences in cognitive abilities variance were accounted for (ranging from 15 to 50% of variance in criterion future measures of academic achievement), non-ability traits accounted for roughly 10–20% of incremental variance across the criterion variables. Although individual and, to some extent, joint investigations of non-ability trait predictors of academic achievement indictors have found similar levels of incremental validity over cognitive ability measures, the results of this study suggest that the 10–20% of incremental variance accounted for may represent a large degree of commonality among these non-ability measures that is only apparent when all families of traits are measured.
- One of the most intriguing and unique aspects of the reported results is the influence of non-ability measures, especially those associated with ‘engagement’ and self-concept/self-ratings of abilities on whether or not students enrolled in any elective Advanced Placement courses, and if so, how many such courses were completed during the course of secondary education. These results are consistent with the theoretical proposition that non-ability traits are most likely to be valid predictors when the environmental press is low (or lower), in comparison to instructional environments where students are required to complete courses such as in basic science, math, and language courses that all students must complete, in order to receive a high-school diploma.
- Even with a wide battery of cognitive and non-ability measures, there remains substantial individual differences variance in academic achievement criteria, suggesting that there are untapped sources of variance yet to be discovered.
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Ability and Domain Knowledge Assessments |
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9th-Grade Ability Assessments |
The Cognitive Abilities Test (CogAT) battery, Level G, Form 6, was administered (Lohman and Hagen 2003). The test is composed of 9 tests, three tests for each of the Verbal, Quantitative, and Figural (Nonverbal) batteries. |
Verbal Battery. In the Verbal Classification test, students are provided with items composed of three words that are related in some fashion, and they are to choose a fourth item that is also related in the same way from a set of options. In the Sentence Completion test, a sentence is presented with a blank instead of a word in the sentence. The student is instructed to select a word from a list of options that “best” completes the sentence. The Verbal Analogies test is a standard four-term analogy test, which takes the form of A ⟶ B: C ⟶ ?, with a set of options from which the student selects the one option that matches the relationship A is to B as C is to? |
Quantitative Battery. In the Quantitative Relations test, each item starts with two given propositions or statements (e.g., I. 1/2 and II. 1/4) and then the student must choose among a set of answer choices that describe the relations among the propositions or statements (e.g., A. I is greater than II; B. II is greater than I; C. I and II are equal). The Number Series test provides the student with four numbers that have a consistent relationship among them (e.g., 1 3 5 7) and the student must select the next number that would fit within the sequence (in this example of increasing odd numbers, the next number would be 9). In the Equation Building test, the items are composed of a set of numbers and mathematical operators (e.g., +− ×÷). The student is instructed to combine the provided numbers and operators to “build” an equation in which the answer choice would follow an “=” sign. |
Nonverbal (Figural) Battery. The first test of this battery is the Figure Classification test. In this test, students are provided with three figures that are alike in some way. They must choose a fourth item from a set of options that also has the same shared characteristic(s) of the first three figures. The Figure Analogies test is composed of standard four-term analogy problems, but the items are polygons made up of figures, instead of words. The Figure Analysis test is a paper-folding test. Each problem shows a plane view of a piece of paper that is folded in different ways, then a hole is punched in one place. The student has to find the option that indicates where the holes would appear when the page is completely unfolded. |
12th-Grade Ability and Domain Knowledge Assessments |
Ability |
|
Domain Knowledge Assessments (source: Ackerman and Rolfhus 1999; Rolfhus and Ackerman 1999) |
|
II. Self-Report Measures |
Our assessments of non-ability constructs largely focused on existing broad constructs of personality, vocational interests, self-concept, and motivational traits, rather than on education-specific constructs, because our main interest was to relate robust constructs that apply generally to achievement settings across a wide range of applications. |
Personality |
NEO-FFI. The NEO-FFI (FFI stands for Five-Factor Inventory; Costa and McCrae 1992) was included to represent broad personality markers. This inventory is composed of 60 items to measure five factors: Neuroticism, Extroversion, Openness to Experience, Conscientiousness, and Agreeableness. |
Need for Achievement and Self-Discipline. Two scales were administered from the International Personality Item Pool (IPIP; Goldberg 2008). The Need for Achievement scale was composed of 10 items; the Self-Discipline scale was composed of 9 items. |
Typical Intellectual Engagement (TIE). A shortened 12-item scale, based on the 59-item Goff and Ackerman (1992) scale was administered. Sample items are “There are few topics that bore me”, and “I read a great deal.” (Note: The TIE has been shown to have substantial overlap with a measure of need for Cognition; see, e.g., Woo et al. 2007). |
Numerical Preferences. A shortened version adapted from the Viswanathan (1993) Preference for Numerical Information scale) was administered. This scale is composed of 11 items and measures an individual’s attraction or aversion to working with numerical or mathematical tasks. |
Vocational Interests |
The 90-item Unisex Edition of the American College Testing Interest Inventory (UNIACT; Lamb and Prediger 1981) was used to assess interest themes identified by Holland (1973) as: Realistic (“accounting”), Investigative (“studying Physics”), Artistic (“compose music”), Social (“run focus groups”), Enterprising (“entertain others”), and Conventional (“repair computers”). |
Self-Concept and Self-Estimates of Ability |
Self-Concept. Self-concepts for abilities and academic pursuits were assessed with a 21-item self-report questionnaire (Ackerman et al. 1995; Kanfer et al. 1996). The areas assessed were self-concepts of verbal, math, and science domains (e.g., “I can recognize correct English usage [i.e., grammar and punctuation]” “I understand concepts in my Sciences courses”). |
Self-Estimates of Ability. For self-ratings of ability, a 14-item questionnaire was used (Ackerman et al. 1995). The items represent five scales of broadly described abilities, aptitudes, or skills, namely verbal, math, science, and general ability. Participants respond with a self-evaluation relative to other persons their age (in terms of percentile rank from 1 to 99). For example, in the verbal domain, items include “Writing Ability” and “Reading Ability.” |
Motivational Traits |
To reiterate our earlier discussion, the focus of this research was on the trait determinants of academic achievement. As such, even though there are numerous other research efforts on motivational factors in the educational context, we were mainly concerned with stable trait aspects of motivation, and not with situational or interventional variables. In conjunction with related personality traits, we assessed key appetitive and aversive aspects of motivational traits. |
The short-form of the Motivational Trait Questionnaire (MTQ; Kanfer and Ackerman 2000; see also Heggestad and Kanfer 2000; Kanfer and Heggestad 1997) is a 48-item measure that contains six scales. The scales represent markers for three underlying motivational trait factors: (1) approach-oriented motivation (Desire to Learn, Mastery); (2) competitive excellence (other-referenced goals, competitiveness), and (3) aversion-related motivational traits (worry, emotionality). |
Total # Items | Mean | Standard Deviation | Highest Score | (# of Perfect Scores) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
CogAT (9th-Grade Administration) | ||||||
1. | Equation Building | 15 | 9.33 | 3.73 | 15 | 24 |
2. | Figure Analogies | 25 | 16.30 | 4.70 | 25 | 4 |
3. | Figure Analysis | 15 | 9.52 | 3.79 | 15 | 46 |
4. | Figure Classification | 25 | 17.20 | 5.36 | 25 | 16 |
5. | Number Series | 20 | 14.38 | 4.20 | 20 | 41 |
6. | Quantitative Relations | 25 | 18.55 | 4.26 | 25 | 22 |
7. | Sentence Completion | 20 | 14.69 | 3.28 | 20 | 13 |
8. | Verbal Analogies | 25 | 16.31 | 5.05 | 25 | 7 |
9. | Verbal Classification | 20 | 13.09 | 3.99 | 20 | 9 |
12th-Grade Ability and Domain Knowledge Tests | ||||||
1. | Vocabulary | 48 | 17.03 | 7.55 | 43.00 | 0 |
2. | Math Ability | 32 | 9.21 | 3.22 | 15.75 | 0 |
3. | US History | 123 | 56.53 | 15.79 | 99.50 | 0 |
4. | Biology | 73 | 24.04 | 9.23 | 54.50 | 0 |
5. | Western Civilization | 100 | 32.26 | 10.36 | 63.75 | 0 |
6. | US Literature | 79 | 38.63 | 11.19 | 69.00 | 0 |
7. | Chemistry | 58 | 18.98 | 7.33 | 41.75 | 0 |
8. | US Government | 81 | 30.13 | 11.83 | 62.25 | 0 |
Grade Point Average | ||||||
1. | 12th grade only | 3.33 | 0.50 | 4.0 | 44 | |
2. | Cumulative 9th–12th | 3.30 | 0.45 | 4.0 | 12 | |
AP Courses | ||||||
1. | Total Number Completed | 7.33 | 6.19 | [max = 27.] | ||
2. | Participation (# ≥ 1) [No = 151, Yes = 587] |
#Items | Mean | sd | α | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Personality Traits | ||||
Neuroticism | 12 | 3.30 | 0.86 | 0.83 |
Extroversion | 12 | 4.34 | 0.67 | 0.78 |
Openness to Experience | 12 | 3.71 | 0.63 | 0.64 |
Agreeableness | 12 | 4.15 | 0.63 | 0.73 |
Conscientiousness | 12 | 4.16 | 0.70 | 0.83 |
TIE | 12 | 3.89 | 0.78 | 0.79 |
Need for Achievement | 10 | 4.35 | 0.73 | 0.83 |
Self-Discipline | 9 | 3.62 | 0.89 | 0.86 |
Numerical Preferences | 11 | 4.07 | 0.98 | 0.90 |
Interests | ||||
Realistic | 15 | 3.13 | 0.92 | 0.89 |
Investigative | 15 | 3.47 | 1.04 | 0.92 |
Artistic | 15 | 3.86 | 1.04 | 0.90 |
Social | 15 | 4.22 | 0.76 | 0.85 |
Enterprising | 15 | 3.51 | 0.88 | 0.89 |
Conventional | 15 | 2.80 | 0.97 | 0.92 |
Self-Concept and Self-Estimates of Abilities | ||||
Verbal Self-Concept | 7 | 4.58 | 0.92 | 0.86 |
Math Self-Concept | 7 | 4.52 | 1.07 | 0.92 |
Science Self-Concept | 7 | 4.36 | 1.03 | 0.92 |
Self-Estimate Verbal | 6 | 74.95 | 16.38 | 0.85 |
Self-Estimate Math | 5 | 72.49 | 19.68 | 0.91 |
Self-Estimate Science | 1 | 68.12 | 26.53 | - |
Self-Estimate Intelligence | 1 | 82.68 | 17.49 | - |
Motivational Traits | ||||
Desire to Learn | 8 | 4.32 | 0.76 | 0.82 |
Mastery | 8 | 4.23 | 0.84 | 0.86 |
Other-Oriented Goals | 7 | 4.01 | 0.91 | 0.83 |
Competitiveness | 6 | 3.69 | 1.05 | 0.86 |
Worry | 10 | 3.59 | 0.92 | 0.85 |
Emotionality | 9 | 3.21 | 0.87 | 0.80 |
Vocabulary | Math | Domain | 12Grade | Cumu. | Adv. Placement | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
9th-Grade Measures | Ability | Knowledge | GPA | GPA | Total | |
Abilities | ||||||
Verbal | 0.644 ** | 0.317 ** | 0.618 ** | 0.375 ** | 0.484 ** | 0.531 ** |
Quantitative | 0.349 ** | 0.383 ** | 0.496 ** | 0.317 ** | 0.437 ** | 0.548 ** |
Figural | 0.368 ** | 0.431 ** | 0.419 ** | 0.327 ** | 0.440 ** | 0.471 ** |
General Composite 2 | 0.525 ** | 0.447 ** | 0.579 ** | 0.387 ** | 0.516 ** | 0.578 ** |
Personality Traits | ||||||
Neuroticism | −0.089 | −0.059 | −0.173 ** | −0.060 | −0.070 | −0.116 ** |
Extroversion | −0.103 | 0.017 | −0.087 | −0.002 | −0.072 | −0.074 * |
Openness to Experience | 0.339 ** | 0.090 | 0.269 ** | 0.025 | 0.088 * | 0.236 ** |
Agreeableness | 0.042 | 0.047 | 0.074 | 0.160 ** | 0.172 ** | 0.039 |
Conscientiousness | 0.058 | 0.076 | 0.113 | 0.184 ** | 0.221 ** | 0.087 * |
TIE | 0.330 ** | 0.175 ** | 0.314 ** | 0.073 * | 0.180 ** | 0.304 ** |
Need for Achievement | 0.202 ** | 0.165 * | 0.239 ** | 0.185 ** | 0.290 ** | 0.230 ** |
Self-Discipline | −0.059 | 0.008 | 0.030 | 0.046 | 0.078 | −0.026 |
Numerical Preferences | 0.129 * | 0.264 ** | 0.204 ** | 0.147 ** | 0.236 ** | 0.253 ** |
Interests | ||||||
Realistic | 0.062 | 0.249 ** | 0.094 | −0.005 | −0.022 | 0.096 ** |
Investigative | 0.220 ** | 0.229 ** | 0.205 ** | 0.066 | 0.112 ** | 0.191 ** |
Artistic | 0.230 ** | 0.048 | 0.176 ** | 0.045 | 0.044 | 0.127 ** |
Social | 0.001 | 0.031 | 0.009 | 0.021 | −0.008 | 0.017 |
Enterprising | 0.015 | −0.076 | 0.014 | −0.075 * | −0.083 * | 0.067 |
Conventional | 0.023 | 0.083 | 0.018 | −0.019 | −0.001 | 0.065 |
Self-Concept and Self-Estimates of Abilities | ||||||
Verbal Self-Concept | 0.285 ** | 0.004 | 0.212 ** | 0.038 | 0.081 * | 0.152 ** |
Math Self-Concept | 0.097 | 0.294 ** | 0.230 ** | 0.233 ** | 0.316 ** | 0.290 ** |
Science Self-Concept | 0.233 ** | 0.228 ** | 0.328 ** | 0.142 ** | 0.222 ** | 0.288 ** |
Self-Estimate Verbal | 0.380 ** | 0.034 | 0.356 ** | 0.059 | 0.129 ** | 0.246 ** |
Self-Estimate Math | 0.181 ** | 0.291 ** | 0.317 ** | 0.216 ** | 0.322 ** | 0.335 ** |
Self-Estimate Science | 0.254 ** | 0.285 ** | 0.359 ** | 0.150 ** | 0.250 ** | 0.137 ** |
Self-Estimate Intelligence | 0.215 ** | 0.121 | 0.345 ** | 0.100 ** | 0.189 ** | 0.318 ** |
Motivational Traits | ||||||
Desire to Learn | 0.215 ** | 0.164 * | 0.304 ** | 0.056 | 0.138 ** | 0.226 ** |
Mastery | 0.091 | 0.177 ** | 0.158 ** | 0.103 ** | 0.202 ** | 0.145 ** |
Other-Oriented Goals | 0.072 | 0.210 ** | 0.120 * | 0.102 ** | 0.168 ** | 0.162 ** |
Competitiveness | 0.081 | 0.194 ** | 0.079 | 0.007 | 0.012 | 0.064 |
Worry | 0.017 | 0.023 | −0.055 | 0.072 | 0.048 | 0.007 |
Emotionality | −0.088 | −0.001 | −0.130 * | −0.030 | −0.060 | −0.094 * |
Vocabulary | Math | Domain | 12Grade | Cumu. | Adv. Placement | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
9th-Grade Measures | Ability | Knowledge | GPA | GPA | Total | ||
Step in Hierarchical Regression | |||||||
1. | Ability | ||||||
R2 | 0.395 ** | 0.161 ** | 0.497 ** | 0.154 ** | 0.274 ** | 0.366 ** | |
Total R2 | 0.395 ** | 0.161 ** | 0.497 ** | 0.154 ** | 0.274 ** | 0.366 ** | |
2. | Personality | ||||||
R2 in isolation | 0.278 ** | 0.101 * | 0.291 ** | 0.096 ** | 0.096 ** | 0.242 ** | |
R2 to Add | 0.062 * | 0.019 ns | 0.061 * | 0.058 ** | 0.105 ** | 0.069 ** | |
Total R2 | 0.457 ** | 0.180 ** | 0.558 ** | 0.213 ** | 0.379 ** | 0.435 ** | |
3. | Interests | ||||||
R2 in isolation | 0.124 ** | 0.126 ** | 0.067 * | 0.056 * | 0.070 * | 0.060 ** | |
R2 to Add | 0.031 ns | 0.116 ** | 0.010 ns | 0.019 ns | 0.022 ** | 0.002 ns | |
Total R2 | 0.488 ** | 0.296 ** | 0.568 ** | 0.232 ** | 0.401 ** | 0.437 ** | |
4. | Self-Concept and Self-Estimates of Abilities | ||||||
R2 in isolation | 0.199 ** | 0.170 ** | 0.280 ** | 0.067 ** | 0.068 ** | 0.199 ** | |
R2 to Add | 0.070 ** | 0.051 ns | 0.043 * | 0.021 ns | 0.024 * | 0.017 ns | |
Total R2 | 0.558 ** | 0.346 ** | 0.611 ** | 0.253 ** | 0.425 ** | 0.454 ** | |
5. | Motivational Traits | ||||||
R2 in isolation | 0.059 ns | 0.060 ns | 0.148 ** | 0.024 ns | 0.024 ns | 0.073 ** | |
R2 to Add | 0.039 * | 0.040 ns | 0.015 ns | 0.009 ns | 0.015 * | 0.005 ns | |
Total R2 | 0.597 ** | 0.387 ** | 0.627 ** | 0.262 ** | 0.440 ** | 0.460 ** |
Vocabulary | Math | Domain | 12Grade | |
---|---|---|---|---|
9th-Grade Measures | Ability | Knowledge | GPA | |
Abilities | ||||
Verbal | 0.535 ** | 0.137 | 0.547 ** | 0.189 * |
Quantitative | 0.152 * | 0.195 ** | 0.386 ** | 0.027 |
Figural | 0.162 * | 0.267 ** | 0.245 ** | 0.024 |
General Composite 2 | 0.342 ** | 0.258 ** | 0.460 ** | 0.095 |
Personality Traits | ||||
Neuroticism | 0.130 | −0.065 | −0.262 ** | −0.070 |
Extroversion | −0.116 | 0.001 | −0.033 | 0.066 |
Openness to Experience | 0.273 ** | 0.046 | 0.224 ** | 0.025 |
Agreeableness | −0.003 | 0.000 | 0.003 | 0.101 |
Conscientiousness | 0.007 | −0.045 | 0.029 | 0.110 |
TIE | 0.249 ** | 0.064 | 0.248 ** | 0.011 |
Need for Achievement | 0.110 | 0.032 | 0.160 * | 0.046 |
Self-Discipline | −0.082 | −0.071 | −0.005 | 0.011 |
Numerical Preferences | 0.062 | 0.159 * | 0.129 | 0.008 |
Interests | ||||
Realistic | 0.009 | 0.249 ** | 0.155 * | −0.032 |
Investigative | 0.161 * | 0.192 ** | 0.210 ** | 0.047 |
Artistic | 0.167 * | −0.015 | 0.134 | 0.063 |
Social | −0.040 | 0.012 | 0.020 | 0.028 |
Enterprising | 0.088 | −0.094 | 0.140 | 0.030 |
Conventional | 0.061 | 0.080 | 0.095 | −0.030 |
Self-Concept and Self-Estimates of Abilities | ||||
Verbal Self-Concept | 0.288 ** | −0.071 | 0.183 * | −0.002 |
Math Self-Concept | −0.012 | 0.224 ** | 0.140 | 0.098 |
Science Self-Concept | 0.157 * | 0.202 ** | 0.351 ** | 0.076 |
Self-Estimate Verbal | 0.309 ** | −0.113 | 0.255 ** | 0.006 |
Self-Estimate Math | 0.030 | 0.175 * | 0.177 * | 0.088 |
Self-Estimate Science | 0.147 | 0.216 ** | 0.300 ** | 0.071 |
Self-Estimate Intelligence | 0.071 | −0.100 | 0.227 ** | 0.060 |
Motivational Traits | ||||
Desire to Learn | 0.143 | 0.084 | 0.280 ** | 0.009 |
Mastery | 0.000 | 0.103 | 0.154 * | −0.023 |
Other-Oriented Goals | −0.020 | 0.111 | 0.034 | −0.050 |
Competitiveness | 0.031 | 0.083 | 0.138 | 0.013 |
Worry | −0.027 | −0.045 | −0.159 * | −0.081 |
Emotionality | −0.073 | −0.016 | −0.192 * | −0.046 |
#AP Courses | Participation | ||
---|---|---|---|
t | Cohen’s D | ||
Assessed during 9th grade | |||
Abilities | |||
Verbal | 0.517 ** | 9.14 ** | 1.07 |
Quantitative | 0.538 ** | 8.89 ** | 1.04 |
Figural | 0.446 ** | 7.14 ** | 0.84 |
General Composite 2 | 0.559 ** | 9.44 | 1.11 |
Personality Traits | |||
Neuroticism | −0.149 ** | −1.56 ns | −0.14 |
Extroversion | −0.107 * | −0.78 ns | −0.07 |
Openness to Experience | 0.240 ** | 3.88 ** | 0.35 |
Agreeableness | 0.020 | 0.30 ns | 0.03 |
Conscientiousness | 0.090 * | 1.22 ns | 0.11 |
TIE | 0.320 ** | 6.05 ** | 0.55 |
Numerical Preferences | 0.269 ** | 4.34 ** | 0.40 |
Need for Achievement | 0.236 ** | 4.12 ** | 0.38 |
Self-Discipline | −0.011 | −0.79 ns | −0.07 |
Interests | |||
Realistic | 0.055 | −0.56 ns | −0.05 |
Investigative | 0.188 ** | 2.64 ** | 0.24 |
Artistic | 0.098 * | 1.97 * | 0.18 |
Social | −0.021 | −0.79 ns | −0.07 |
Enterprising | 0.037 | −0.82 ns | −0.08 |
Conventional | 0.093 * | −0.51 ns | −0.05 |
Self-Concept and Self-Estimates of Abilities | |||
Verbal Self-Concept | 0.193 ** | 3.32 ** | 0.30 |
Math Self-Concept | 0.294 ** | 6.04 ** | 0.55 |
Science Self-Concept | 0.297 ** | 6.49 ** | 0.59 |
Self-Estimate Verbal | 0.273 ** | 5.15 ** | 0.47 |
Self-Estimate Math | 0.343 ** | 6.75 ** | 0.61 |
Self-Estimate Science | 0.312 ** | 6.68 ** | 0.61 |
Self-Estimate Intelligence | 0.314 ** | 7.07 ** | 0.64 |
Motivational Traits | |||
Desire to Learn | 0.261 ** | 3.65 ** | 0.33 |
Mastery | 0.162 ** | 2.34 * | 0.21 |
Other-Oriented Goals | 0.115 ** | 3.24 ** | 0.30 |
Competitiveness | 0.044 | 1.00 ns | 0.09 |
Worry | −0.042 | 1.29 ns | 0.12 |
Emotionality | −0.127 ** | −1.38 ns | −0.13 |
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Ackerman, P.L.; Kanfer, R. Cognitive Ability and Non-Ability Trait Predictors of Academic Achievement: A Four-Year Longitudinal Study. J. Intell. 2025, 13, 79. https://doi.org/10.3390/jintelligence13070079
Ackerman PL, Kanfer R. Cognitive Ability and Non-Ability Trait Predictors of Academic Achievement: A Four-Year Longitudinal Study. Journal of Intelligence. 2025; 13(7):79. https://doi.org/10.3390/jintelligence13070079
Chicago/Turabian StyleAckerman, Phillip L., and Ruth Kanfer. 2025. "Cognitive Ability and Non-Ability Trait Predictors of Academic Achievement: A Four-Year Longitudinal Study" Journal of Intelligence 13, no. 7: 79. https://doi.org/10.3390/jintelligence13070079
APA StyleAckerman, P. L., & Kanfer, R. (2025). Cognitive Ability and Non-Ability Trait Predictors of Academic Achievement: A Four-Year Longitudinal Study. Journal of Intelligence, 13(7), 79. https://doi.org/10.3390/jintelligence13070079