SELF-EFFICACY AND ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE
The aim of the present study was to examine the predictive effectiveness of self-efficacy in an academic setting. Seventy-six postgraduate students completed a questionnaire to assess efficacy expectations toward competencies perceived to underpin performance on the course. As there
was a 13-week difference in time between completing the self-efficacy questionnaire and completing the performance criterion, it was considered important to assess the stability of self-efficacy measures. To this end, participants completed the same items one week later. Test-retest reliability
results indicated that efficacy to cope with “intellectual demands”, “pass first time”, and “achieve a specific grade” were relatively stable. Performance was assessed using end of the semester grades. Regression results showed that “self-efficacy
to cope with the intellectual demands of the program” predicted 11.5% of performance variance. Given that there was a 13- week time gap between self-efficacy and performance and that the complexity of the task was high, findings from the present study suggest that self-efficacy
has some utility in an academic setting.
Document Type: Research Article
Publication date: 01 January 2001
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