1. Sources of math and science self-efficacy in rural Appalachia: A convergent mixed methods study.
- Author
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Usher, Ellen L., Ford, Calah J., Li, Caihong R., and Weidner, Brianna L.
- Subjects
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SELF-efficacy , *SELF-efficacy in students , *SOCIAL cognitive theory , *STRUCTURAL equation modeling , *POVERTY , *ACADEMIC motivation - Abstract
Highlights • Quantitative and qualitative methods point to different sources of self-efficacy. • Students combine information from various efficacy-relevant sources. • The sources of self-efficacy in math and science differ for some students. • Compared to boys, girls use more social information when judging their efficacy. • Students name different factors that raise or lower their self-efficacy. Abstract Rural living, particularly in economically distressed areas, may reduce students' educational opportunities and alter their self-beliefs. According to social cognitive theory, the contexts in which people live influence how they feel about their capabilities. The purpose of this study was to examine the experiences that raise and lower the math and science self-efficacy of students living in a rural, high-poverty area in Central Appalachia. A convergent mixed methods design was used to examine quantitative and qualitative survey data from 673 students in Grades 6–12 who took part in a multi-year study on academic motivation (Year 1 = 511; Year 2 = 391; Year 3 = 418). In the quantitative phase, structural equation models showed that Year 1 mastery experience raised and physiological states lowered students' math and science self-efficacy in Year 2. Deductive coding of students' responses to 4 open-ended questions in Year 3 indicated that other sources were also salient and differed by domain, their effect on self-efficacy, and student gender. Integrative analyses showed that students consider information from multiple sources when judging their capabilities. This research extends findings related to the sources of self-efficacy to the understudied population of rural learners, the less-studied context of science, and to the factors that not only increase but decrease perceived efficacy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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