Abstract:In two experiments, we investigated how attributed of peer models influenced achievement behaviors among children who had experienced difficulties learning mathematical skills in school. In Experiment 1, children (M = 10.6 years) observed either a same-or opposite-sex peer model demonstrating rapid (mastery model) or gradual (coping model) acquisition of fraction skills. Observing a coping model led to higher self-efficacy, skill, and training performance. In Experiment 2, children (M = 10.9 years) observed either one or three same-sex peer models demonstrating mastery or coping behaviors while solving fractions. Children in the single-coping model, multiple-coping-model, and multiple-mastery-model conditions demonstrated higher self-efficacy, skill, and training performance, compared with subjects who observed a single mastery model. In both studies, children who observed coping models judged themselves more similar in competence to the models than did subjects who observed mastery models.
Article:Perceived self-efficacy, or personal beliefs about one's capabilities to organize and implement actions necessary for attaining designated levels of performance, is hypothesized to be an important mechanism mediating behavior change (Bandura, 1982(Bandura, , 1986. Self-efficacy can affect one's choice of activities, effort expenditure, persistence, and achievement. Individuals acquire information about their self-efficacy through their actual performances, vicarious (observational) experiences, forms of persuasion (e.g., -You can do this‖), and physiological indexes (sweating and heart rate).Modeled performances constitute an important source of information about one's self-efficacy (Bandura, 1986). Individuals who observe similar others performing a task are apt to believe that they also can perform the task because modeling implicitly conveys to observers that they possess the necessary capabilities for succeeding (Berger, 1977). This sense of efficacy is substantiated later when observers succeed at the task (Schunk, 1985). Observers' self-efficacy judgments depend in part on perceptions of similarity in competence to the model and on the outcome (e.g., success or failure) of the model's actions (Brown & Inouye, 1978 ;Zimmerman & Ringle, 1981).The preceding considerations suggest that although adults can serve as powerful models for transmitting behaviors to children, behaviors that are constrained by ability may be more susceptible to peer influence (Davidson & Smith, 1982). Schoolchildren learn skills by observing their adult teachers, but observation of peer models may better enhance children's self-efficacy. In particular, an adult teacher's flawlessly modeling cognitive skills may not promote high self-efficacy in children who have encountered previous difficulties with the subject matter and who are likely to view the teacher as superior in competence. Models of the same age and sex as children and whom children view as similar in competence may teach children skills and promote their self-efficacy f...