A CONCEPTUAL STUDY ON IMPACT OF TEACHER EFFICACY ON STUDENTS LEARNING OUTCOMES
Creators
- 1. Assistant Professor in Business Administration - BPM, PSGR Krishnammal College for Women, Coimbatore, Tamilnadu
Description
Teacher efficacy is defined as Teachers’ self-efficacy refers to a teacher’s belief in his or her ability to execute courses of action required to successfully complete a specific teaching task in a particular context. Bandura (1977) defines self-efficacy beliefs as an individual's conviction about his or her capabilities to accomplish a task when faced with a challenge. Outcome based education, being the current trend in the field of education, changes the role of a teacher from just teaching in the classroom to being a facilitator to the students to facilitate their learning. Teacher efficacy beliefs (teachers' self-efficacy) have been related to teaching strategies, instructions, and motivation (Holzberger, Philipp and Kunter, 2013 Kleinsasser, 2014; Midgley, Feldlaufer and Eccles, 1989) as well as to student achievement (Austin, 2013). Teachers with higher teacher efficacy become more effective in the classroom and are less likely to experience burnout (Kleinsasser, 2014; Ross, 2013). If students are to achieve high standards then no less can be expected of their teachers (National Commission on Teaching & America’s Future, 1996). Teachers with strong selfefficacy beliefs have also been shown to be better organized, to engage in more effective planning (Allinder, 1994), and are more likely to set high performance standards for themselves as well for their students (Ross, 1995).
Files
503.pdf
Files
(341.7 kB)
Name | Size | Download all |
---|---|---|
md5:74086bf2d9f3813ae1fb683b4ac26659
|
341.7 kB | Preview Download |
Additional details
References
- 1. Karen D. Multon (January 1991), Relation of self-efficacy beliefs to academic outcomes: A meta-analytic investigation, Journal of Counseling Psychology, Vol 38, No. 1, Pp 31-38. 2. Mary J. Huber, Jason D. Fruth, Alan Avila-John, Enrique Rodriquez (March 2016), Journal of Education and Human Development, Vol. 5, No. 1, pp. 46-54. 3. Ioana Topala, Simona Tomozii (April 2014), Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences, pp.380-386 4. Papa, Lesther A., "The Impact of Academic and Teaching Self-Efficacy on Student Engagement and Academic Outcomes" (2015). All Graduate Theses and Dissertations. Paper 4361. 5. D.W.S. Tai, Y-C. Hu, R. Wang & J-L. Chen, 3rd WIETE Annual Conference on Engineering and Technology Education Pattaya, Thailand, 6-10 February 2012 6. Eberle, Wayne M., (2011). "Teacher Self-Efficy and Student Achievement as Measured by North Carolina Reading and Math End-Of-Grade Tests."