Determinants of academic self-efficacy in different socialization contexts: Investigating the relationship between students’ academic self-efficacy and its sources in different contexts

Journal articleResearchPeer reviewed

Publication data


ByMiriam M. Gebauer, Nele McElvany, Wilfried Bos, Olaf Köller, Christian Schöber
Original languageEnglish
Published inSocial Psychology of Education, 23(2)
Pages339-358
Editor (Publisher)Springer
ISSN1381-2890, 1573-1928
DOI/Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s11218-019-09535-0
Publication statusPublished – 04.2020

The present study examined the four sources of self-efficacy (mastery experience, vicarious experience, verbal and social persuasion, and physiological state) and how these predict academic self-efficacy over time in N = 1597 (t1) and N = 1373 (t2) 7th-grade students. We simultaneously differentiated three different educationally relevant socialization contexts: the family, peers, and school. Although existing measures to assess sources of academic self-efficacy have considered different socialization contexts, they have done this neither systematically nor for all sources. Confirmatory factor analysis of the four sources in three socialization contexts showed a good fit to the data. Results of structural equation models at t1 showed differential patterns of substantial impact on academic self-efficacy in each socialization context. Over time, the impact decreased when controlling for SES. Results deliver only partial support for Bandura’s theoretical approach and indicate the need to revise social-cognitive theory.