1. Comparison of Self-Beliefs for Predicting Student Motivation and Achievement.
- Author
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Bong, Mimi, Cho, Catherine, Ahn, Hyun Seon, and Kim, Hye Jin
- Subjects
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SELF-perception in children , *ACADEMIC motivation , *SELF-efficacy in students , *TEST anxiety , *PSYCHOLOGY of school children , *ACADEMIC achievement testing - Abstract
The authors examined whether self-concept, self-efficacy, and self-esteem show differential predictive utility for academic achievement across age groups and domains. More specifically, the relationships of 3 self-constructs with achievement were examined in mathematics for elementary school students and mathematics and language arts for middle school students in Korea. Task value and test anxiety were hypothesized to mediate these relationships. Consistent with previous reports, domain-specific self-constructs such as self-efficacy and self-concept were better predictors of task value and achievement than was general self-esteem. Task value and test anxiety significantly mediated only the relationships of self-efficacy assessed by the Bandura-type scale to achievement. These domain-specific relationships tended to be stronger for middle school than elementary school students and in mathematics than language arts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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