| Literature DB >> 35282472 |
Kristy A Robinson1, Tony Perez2, Arianna White-Levatich2, Lisa Linnenbrink-Garcia3.
Abstract
The end of college is a key transition point when students prepare for the workforce or graduate school, and when competence beliefs that have been shaped throughout college play a particularly important role in decision-making processes. This study examined the roles of two competence beliefs, self-efficacy for scientific tasks and science academic self-efficacy, during the final year of college. A structural equation model was used to examine science research self-efficacy and science academic self-efficacy as predictors of post-graduation science career intentions and life satisfaction; prior achievement was also included as a predictor of competence beliefs and post-graduation outcomes. Findings indicated that both types of self-efficacy predicted career intentions and life satisfaction. To better understand the processes that contribute to gender gaps in certain science careers, gender differences in mean levels of self-efficacy and in the structural relations among the variables of interest were examined using multi-group analyses. Females reported lower academic self-efficacy, despite having similar levels of prior achievement and outcomes; structural relations also appeared to vary by gender. Results extend theoretical understanding of the roles of two distinct forms of self-efficacy and the potential mechanisms explaining gender gaps in science fields.Entities:
Keywords: STEM; career intentions; gender; post-secondary education; self-efficacy
Year: 2020 PMID: 35282472 PMCID: PMC8916716 DOI: 10.1080/00220973.2020.1808944
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Educ ISSN: 0022-0973