Ayuda
Ir al contenido

Dialnet


Resumen de Influence of Context on Item-Specific Self-Efficacy and Competence of Engineering Students

Masoud Ghodrat Abadi, David S. Hurwitz, Shane A. Brown

  • Self-efficacy is critical for academic success. Self-efficacy theory suggests that the social setting and problem format caninfluence self-efficacy. While robust studies assessing students’ self-efficacy and its relation to other academic outcomeshave been undertaken, little is known about the relation between self-efficacy and competence on specific problems andhow problem format and implementation type relate to self-efficacy. 94 conceptual questions in three formats(interpretation, ranking task, and multiple-choice) were developed through an iterative research-based effort. Tenuniversity faculty implemented questions with their students in one of five types (closed-book exam, take-home exam,in-class quiz, homework, and group discussion). In total, 569 individual students responded to 2,006 questions. To captureitem-specific self-efficacy (ISSE), students were asked to rate their confidence immediately after they had answeredindividual questions, on a 10-point scale. It was found that students with similar performance self-reported a wide varianceof self-efficacy and that many student answers lacked correspondence between self-efficacy and performance. Results ofmultivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA) revealed that student performance differed according to question formatand implementation. Students performed best on interpretation questions and they had the highest ISSE and percentagecorrectness for problems completed in groups. The findings support that interactive learning can contribute to studentcompetence and self-efficacy.


Fundación Dialnet

Dialnet Plus

  • Más información sobre Dialnet Plus