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A study in Bandura’s self-efficacy Theory. By Melissa Farris. Albert Bandura Biography. Born 1925 in a small town in Canada. Moved to USA for Graduate School. Enrolled in his first Psychology Class almost by chance, and ultimately received his Ph.D in Clinical Psychology.
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A study in Bandura’s self-efficacy Theory By Melissa Farris
Albert BanduraBiography • Born 1925 in a small town in Canada. Moved to USA for Graduate School. • Enrolled in his first Psychology Class almost by chance, and ultimately received his Ph.D in Clinical Psychology. • Became greatly influenced by Sears, Skinner, and other theorists of social learning theory. • Currently a Faculty Member of Stanford University
Key Terms: • Self-Regulation: To be able to regulate one’s own behavior without the need for external rewards or punishments • Self-Efficacy: The measure of one’s belief in one’s own personal capacity to complete a task or fulfill a goal. • Modeling/Vicarious Experience: • A form of learning where one learns how to act or behave based on observing the actions of another individual. • Verbal Persuasion: The action of attempting to effect another’s self-efficacy through words of praise and motivation. • Enactive Mastery Experience: The experience of having completed a task. • Physiological and Affective States: Believing in one’s capabilities based on bodily cues, such as fatigue or tension.
Bandura’s Self-Efficacy Theory • Humans who have achieved the state of self-regulation are influenced in their own self-efficacy mainly by these four main factors: • Enactive Mastery • Vicarious Experiences • Verbal Persuasion • Physiological and Affective States • The actual experience of Enactive Mastery is the most influential, as it gives the person a personal, and experiential foundation to base their self-efficacy on.
Goals and Purposes • The purpose of this study is to test the three main factors that, according to Bandura, have the greatest influence on self-efficacy. • Which source of self-efficacy – Enactive Mastery, Vicarious Experience, or Verbal persuasion – has the greatest influence on the child’s self-efficacy? • Are there patterns of influence relevant to gender and age?
Hypothesis • That Bandura will be correct! • That the child’s self-efficacy will be most influenced by the Enactive Mastery Experience. • and… • That there will be a greater decrease of the over-all influence of Modeling and Verbal Persuasion on the older children, as they will have a more definite understanding of their previous experiences to base their self-efficacy on. • That girls will have a lower self-efficacy over-all in Math than boys, based upon the social stereotype that boys are better at Math than girls.
Procedure • At Holy Family, I met with 7th Graders and 4th Graders three times. • There were six 7th Graders, and six 4th Graders. • First Visit • (Control) • The children were shown a grade appropriate math test, and were asked to rate their belief in their capabilities to answer all the questions correctly. • These children were then separated into four groups. • Groups A and B of 7th graders • Groups A and B of 4th graders
Procedure • Second Visit • (Verbal Persuasion and Vicarious Experience) • The Group A’s were shown a video of a UD student giving a “pep talk” regarding the Math Test they were to take. In this “pep talk”, the children were offered positive Verbal Persuasion.
Procedure • Second Visit • (Verbal Persuasion and Vicarious Experience) • The Group B’s were shown a video of a UD student taking the same test they were to take. In this video, the UD student is reacting positively to the test, commenting on how easy it is, and how she knows she can do it. This offers the children a Vicarious Experience.
Procedure • Second Visit • (Verbal Persuasion and Vicarious Experience) • The children were then asked to rate themselves again on the Self-Efficacy Predictor Sheet, and take the Math Test!
Procedure • Third Visit • (Enactive Mastery Experience) • All of the tests were graded, and given back to the children. • After having seen their grade, and outcome of the experience of the test, the children were given a second test. The children were made to understand that it was in the same format as the previous one, only with different questions. • The children were again asked to rate themselves on the Self-Efficacy Predictor Sheet, this time on how well they believed they could do on the second math test, knowing how they did on the first. This was to rate the children having now had their Enactive Mastery Experience.
Data (Group A) (Rating on Self-Efficacy Predictor Sheet)
Data (Group B) (Rating on Self-Efficacy Predictor Sheet)
Data (7th Graders) (Rating on Self-Efficacy Predictor Sheet)
Data (4th Graders) (Rating on Self-Efficacy Predictor Sheet)
Data (Comparing both Grades) (Rating on Self-Efficacy Predictor Sheet)
Data (Comparing Genders) (Rating on Self-Efficacy Predictor Sheet)
Interesting Findings • Some children on seeing what mistakes they made, were convinced they wouldn’t have done that again. In this way the negative Enactive Mastery Experience did not effect their self-efficacy • Only one participant in the whole study got 100% on the math test, however, the majority of the 7th Graders’ self-efficacy ratings still remained at a 4. • There was an increase in a lot of the low scoring 4th Graders on seeing the video, but it shot back down after taking the test itself.
Results • Bandura was right! • In the study, there was over-all a greater difference (while certainly not positive) in the participants’ self-efficacy after the Enactive Mastery Experience. • However… • There was a more positive outcome from the • Vicarious Experience
Results • Differences in Grades • I was correct! • There was a bigger difference in the 4th Graders as a whole upon watching the videos, whereas the 7th Graders tended to be more confident in themselves. • Difference in Gender • I was correct in this too! (But could use more data)
Modifications • Meeting with each participant individually • Harder Math Tests: to push the participants’ to where they weren’t so comfortable. This might have given a wider range in their over-all self-efficacy ratings • Larger group of kids • More diverse group of participants: i.e. a public school, or none-Catholic Private School, to see if this affects a child’s self-efficacy) • An equal number of boys vs. girls.
Nature/Nurture Line Bandura Nature Nurture
Bibliography • Crain, William. "Bandura's Social Learning Theory." Theories of Development: Concepts and Applications. 6th ed. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson, 2011. 204-23. Print. • Bandura, Albert. Self-efficacy: The Exercise of Control. New York: W.H. Freeman, 1997. Print. • McCabe, Patrick. "Convincing Students They Can Learn to Read: Crafting Self-efficacy Prompts." The Clearing House 79.6 (2006): 252-57. Print. • Segelken, Roger. "Putting Research Into Practice: Cornell Tries the "Bandura Model"" Human Ecology 1st ser. 36 (May 2008): 9-10. Print.