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Self-Efficacy and Student Achievement

Self-Efficacy and Student Achievement. Barbara Goza, Ph.D. UCSC Educational Partnership Center UCSC Learning Support Services October 3, 2009. In Appreciation of Learning. Think back to a recent time in which you were being helped with an academic task. What was the task?

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Self-Efficacy and Student Achievement

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  1. Self-Efficacy and Student Achievement Barbara Goza, Ph.D. UCSC Educational Partnership Center UCSC Learning Support Services October 3, 2009

  2. In Appreciation of Learning • Think back to a recent time in which you were being helped with an academic task. • What was the task? • Who was your helper, what was your relationship with your helper? • What specifically did the helper DO? • What did you do/feel in response? • What was the outcome for you? For your helper?

  3. Self-Efficacy: What It Is “The belief in one’s abilities to organize and execute courses of action required to produce given attainments.” (Bandura, 1997, p. 3)

  4. Self-Efficacy: What It Does • Influences: • Choice of courses of action • Amount of energy expended • Perseverance and resilience in the face of challenges and failures

  5. Efficacy Beliefs: How They Work • Cognition • Analytic complexity • Strategic planning • Motivation • Goal setting (specific, difficult goals) • Self-regulation (evaluation and modification) • Emotion • Calmness • Challenge vs. threat appraisals

  6. University Life Study Martin Chemers, Li-Tze Hu, & Ben Garcia (2001) Effects of Academic Efficacy and Optimism on First-Year Student Academic Performance and Adjustment

  7. Participant Demographics • Recruited fromUCSC frosh, Winter 1997 • N = 256 participants with complete data Winter and Spring • 82% Female • Ethnicity: • 58% White • 16% Asian • 15% Latino • 11% Other

  8. GPA Academic Performance Academic Expectations Academic Self-Efficacy Challenge/ Threat Health Problems Stress Optimism Adjustment Path Diagram For Efficacy Effects

  9. Assessing Scientific Inquiry and Leadership Skills (AScILS)Recent Findings Martin M. Chemers, PI University of California, Santa Cruz

  10. Program Components Psychological Processes Outcomes Performance: ScienceInquiry and Leadership Skills Research Experience Science InquirySelf-Efficacy { Leadership and Teamwork Self-Efficacy Mentoring: Instrumental Socio-Emotional Commitment: SatisfactionandContinuationin Science Education and Research Identity and Belonging as a Scientist Community Involvement Student Demographics: Ethnicity, Gender

  11. Participant Demographics • Recruited fromUCSC COSMOS program in 2006 and 2007 • N = 276 participants with complete data (95% of all attendees) • 56% Female • Ethnicity: • 26% Under-Represented Minority • 36% White • 38% Asian • 38% Received financial aid

  12. COSMOS Longitudinal Study: Pre-Program Results Research Experience .39 Science Inquiry Self-Efficacy .20 Commitment .45 .27 Identity as a Science Student .69 .20 Community Involvement Model Fit: χ2 (4) = 4.19, p = .38, CFI = 1.0, IFI = 1.0, GFI = .99, NNFI = .99, RMR = .02, RMSEA = .01 (.00, .09)

  13. Ethnic Group Comparisons on Pre- to Post-Program Change

  14. Ethnic Group Comparisons on Pre- to Post-Program Change

  15. Self-Efficacy: What Are Its Sources?

  16. Enactive Mastery: Graduated challenges with “scaffolding” • Increase competencies gradually • Provide “scaffolding” • “Stretch, but don’t break.”

  17. Social Comparison: Role modeling plus peer comparisons • Social comparison to assess competency • Role modeling for possibilities

  18. Verbal Persuasion: Confidence-supporting explanations for performance • Help students make confidence-building judgments • Explain success and failure

  19. “Causes” of Success and Failure Source: InternalExternal Stable Ability Task Stability Unstable Effort Luck

  20. Judgments that Enhance Confidence: Ability & Effort following Success Task Difficulty following Failure Expect Ups & Downs

  21. AScILS Research Team • Melissa Bayne, Graduate Student, Psychology • Steve Bearman, Graduate Student, Psychology • Martin Chemers, Principal Investigator, Professor Psychology • Faye Crosby, Professor Psychology • Elizabeth Espinoza, Graduate Student, Chemistry • Jamie Franco-Zamudio, Graduate Student, Psychology • Barbara Goza, Educational Partnership Center, Director Research & Evaluation • Lisa Hunter, Center for Adaptive Optics, Associate Director Education and Human Resources • Beth Jaworski, Graduate Student, Psychology • John Johnson, Graduate Student, Psychology • Carrol Moran, Educational Partnership Center, Director • Elizabeth Morgan, Graduate Student, Psychology • Deborah Kogan, Evaluation Consultant • Refugio Rochin, Educational Partnership Center, Dir. Of Research and Evaluation • Kristina Schmukler, Graduate Student, Psychology • Julie Shattuck, Evaluation Consultant • Jerome Shaw, Assistant Professor Education • Moin Syed, Graduate Student, Psychology • Eileen Zurbriggen, Associate Professor Psychology • Former members: • Graduate Students: Lisa Algee, Education; Christy Rowe, Earth Sciences; • Undergraduate Students: Isai Baltezar, Helen Han, Jaime Jarvis, Teiki Kimball, Ana Daniela Mesa, Marisa Sanders, Patrick Schirmer, Barbara Smith, and Zavi Smith, Emilee Turner, Justin Wang, Bridget Zwimpfer, Psychology; Marcia Soriano, Bioinformatics • Others: Stephen Mello, Educational Partnership Center, Policy Analyst;; Gloria Williams, Educational Partnership Center, Data Manager

  22. The project was supported by Grant Number R01GM071935 from the National Institute Of General Medical Sciences. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institute Of General Medical Sciences or the National Institutes of Health.

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