Abstract:In this article self-efficacy research is reviewed in domains relevant to education. Research addressing cognitive skills, social skills, motor skills, and career choices has shown that self-efficacy is an important construct that helps to explain students' learning and performance of achievement-related behaviors. Research also has identified variables that are associated with educational contexts and that signal to students how well they are achieving or making progress in learning. These task-engagement variables include models/social comparative information, goal setting, attributional and performance feedback, strategy instruction, cognitive processing, and reward contingencies. A suggested future self-efficacy research agenda might include maintenance and generalization of changes in self-efficacy, the identification of additional task-engagement variables, instrument development and validation, integration of efficacy information from diverse sources, developmental influences on self-efficacy, and teachers' sense of efficacy. KEY WORDS: achievement; self-efficacy; motivation.
Article: SELF-EFFICACY AND ACHIEVEMENT BEHAVIORSThere is growing evidence that personal cognitions influence the instigation, direction, and persistence of behaviors. Various theoretical traditions emphasize the importance of individuals' beliefs concerning their capabilities to exercise control over important aspects of their lives (