Children's overestimation of performance across age, task, and historical time: A meta-analysis

Child Dev. 2024 May-Jun;95(3):1001-1022. doi: 10.1111/cdev.14042. Epub 2023 Nov 24.

Abstract

Children tend to overestimate their performance on a variety of tasks and activities. The present meta-analysis examines the specificity of this phenomenon across age, tasks, and more than five decades of historical time (1968-2021). Self-overestimation was operationalized as the ratio between children's prospective self-estimates of task performance and their actual (i.e., objectively measured) task performance. A total of 246 effect sizes from 43 published articles were analyzed (4277 participants; 49.6% girls; sample mean ages range from 4 to 12; 86.0% of studies conducted in North America or Europe). Children's self-overestimation was robust across tasks, with their estimates of performance being 1.3 times their actual performance. In addition, children's self-overestimation decreased with sample age and increased with the year of data collection.

Publication types

  • Meta-Analysis
  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Child
  • Europe
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Prospective Studies
  • Task Performance and Analysis*