Self-efficacy is, according to psychologist Albert Bandura
who originally proposed the concept, a personal judgment of "how well
one can execute courses of action required to deal with prospective
situations".
Psychologists have studied self-efficacy from several perspectives, noting various paths in the development of self-efficacy; the dynamics of self-efficacy, and lack thereof, in many different settings; interactions between self-efficacy and self-concept; and habits of attribution that contribute to, or detract from, self-efficacy. Educator Kathy Kolbe adds, "Belief in innate abilities means valuing one's particular set of cognitive strengths. It also involves determination and perseverance to overcome obstacles that would interfere with utilizing those innate abilities to achieve goals."
Self-efficacy affects every area of human endeavor. By determining the beliefs a person holds regarding their power to affect situations, it strongly influences both the power a person actually has to face challenges competently and the choices a person is most likely to make. These effects are particularly apparent, and compelling, with regard to behaviors affecting health.
Psychologists have studied self-efficacy from several perspectives, noting various paths in the development of self-efficacy; the dynamics of self-efficacy, and lack thereof, in many different settings; interactions between self-efficacy and self-concept; and habits of attribution that contribute to, or detract from, self-efficacy. Educator Kathy Kolbe adds, "Belief in innate abilities means valuing one's particular set of cognitive strengths. It also involves determination and perseverance to overcome obstacles that would interfere with utilizing those innate abilities to achieve goals."
Self-efficacy affects every area of human endeavor. By determining the beliefs a person holds regarding their power to affect situations, it strongly influences both the power a person actually has to face challenges competently and the choices a person is most likely to make. These effects are particularly apparent, and compelling, with regard to behaviors affecting health.
Theoretical approaches
Social cognitive theory
Psychologist Albert Bandura
has defined self-efficacy as one's belief in one's ability to succeed
in specific situations or accomplish a task. One's sense of
self-efficacy can play a major role in how one approaches goals, tasks,
and challenges. The theory of self-efficacy lies at the center of Bandura's social cognitive theory, which emphasizes the role of observational learning and social experience in the development of personality.
The main concept in social cognitive theory is that an individual's
actions and reactions, including social behaviors and cognitive
processes, in almost every situation are. influenced by the actions that
individual has observed in others. Because self-efficacy is developed
from external experiences and self-perception and is influential in
determining the outcome of many events, it is an important aspect of
social cognitive theory. Self-efficacy represents the personal
perception of external social factors.
According to Bandura's theory, people with high self-efficacy—that is,
those who believe they can perform well—are more likely to view
difficult tasks as something to be mastered rather than something to be
avoided.
Social learning theory
Social learning theory describes the acquisition of skills that are
developed exclusively or primarily within a social group. Social
learning depends on how individuals either succeed or fail at dynamic
interactions within groups, and promotes the development of individual
emotional and practical skills as well as accurate perception of self
and acceptance of others. According to this theory, people learn from
one another through observation, imitation, and modeling. Self-efficacy
reflects an individual's understanding of what skills he/she can offer
in a group setting.
Self-concept theory
Self-concept theory seeks to explain how people perceive and
interpret their own existence from clues they receive from external
sources, focusing on how these impressions are organized and how they
are active throughout life. Successes and failures are closely related
to the ways in which people have learned to view themselves and their
relationships with others. This theory describes self-concept as learned
(i.e., not present at birth); organized (in the way it is applied to
the self); and dynamic (i.e., ever-changing, and not fixed at a certain
age).
Attribution theory
Attribution theory focuses on how people attribute events and how
those beliefs interact with self-perception. Attribution theory defines
three major elements of cause:
- Locus is the location of the perceived cause. If the locus is internal (dispositional), feelings of self-esteem and self-efficacy will be enhanced by success and diminished by failure.
- Stability describes whether the cause is perceived as static or dynamic over time. It is closely related to expectations and goals, in that when people attribute their failures to stable factors such as the difficulty of a task, they will expect to fail in that task in the future.
- Controllability describes whether a person feels actively in control of the cause. Failing at a task one thinks one cannot control can lead to feelings of humiliation, shame, and/or anger
How it affects human function
Choices regarding behavior
People
generally avoid tasks where self-efficacy is low, but undertake tasks
where self-efficacy is high. When self-efficacy is significantly beyond
actual ability, it leads to an overestimation of the ability to complete
tasks. On the other hand, when self-efficacy is significantly lower
than actual ability, it discourages growth and skill development.
Research shows that the optimum level of self-efficacy is slightly above
ability; in this situation, people are most encouraged to tackle
challenging tasks and gain experience.
Self-efficacy is made of dimensions like magnitude, strength, and
generality to explain how one believes they will perform on a specific
task.
Motivation
High
self-efficacy can affect motivation in both positive and negative ways.
In general, people with high self-efficacy are more likely to make
efforts to complete a task, and to persist longer in those efforts, than
those with low self-efficacy. The stronger the self-efficacy or mastery expectations, the more active the efforts.
However, those with low self-efficacy sometimes experience incentive to
learn more about an unfamiliar subject, where someone with a high
self-efficacy may not prepare as well for a task. A negative effect of
low self-efficacy is that it can lead to a state of learned
helplessness. Learned helplessness was studied by Martin Seligman
in an experiment in which shocks were applied to animals. Through the
experiment, it was discovered that the animals placed in a cage where
they could escape shocks by moving to a different part of the cage did
not attempt to move if they had formerly been placed in a cage in which
escape from the shocks was not possible. Low self-efficacy can lead to
this state in which it is believed that no amount of effort will make a
difference in the success of the task at hand.
Work performance
Self-efficacy
theory has been embraced by management scholars and practitioners
because of its applicability in the workplace. Overall, self-efficacy is
positively and strongly related to work-related performance. This
relationship, though, depends on task complexity. For more complex
tasks, the relationships between self-efficacy and work performance is
weaker than for easier work-related tasks. The implications of this
research is that managers should provide accurate descriptions of tasks
and provide clear and concise instructions and they should provide the
necessary supporting elements for employees to be successful.
Thought patterns and responses
Self-efficacy has several effects on thought patterns and responses:
- Low self-efficacy can lead people to believe tasks to be harder than they actually are. This often results in poor task planning, as well as increased stress.
- People become erratic and unpredictable when engaging in a task in which they have low self-efficacy.
- People with high self-efficacy tend to take a wider view of a task in order to determine the best plan.
- Obstacles often stimulate people with high self-efficacy to greater efforts, where someone with low self-efficacy will tend toward discouragement and giving up.
- A person with high self-efficacy will attribute failure to external factors, where a person with low self-efficacy will blame low ability. For example, someone with high self-efficacy in regards to mathematics may attribute a poor test grade to a harder-than-usual test, illness, lack of effort, or insufficient preparation. A person with a low self-efficacy will attribute the result to poor mathematical ability. See Attribution Theory.
Health behaviors
Choices affecting health, such as smoking, physical exercise, dieting, condom use, dental hygiene, seat belt use, and breast self-examination, are dependent on self-efficacy.
Self-efficacy beliefs are cognitions that determine whether health
behavior change will be initiated, how much effort will be expended, and
how long it will be sustained in the face of obstacles and failures.
Self-efficacy influences how high people set their health goals (e.g.,
"I intend to reduce my smoking", or "I intend to quit smoking
altogether"). A number of studies on the adoption of health practices
have measured self-efficacy to assess its potential to initiate behavior
change.
With increased self-efficacy, individuals have greater confidence in
their ability and thus are more likely to engage in healthy behaviors.
Greater engagement in healthy behaviors, result in positive patient
health outcomes such as improved quality of life.
Relationship to loss of control
Bandura showed that difference in self-efficacy correlates to fundamentally different world views.
People with high self-efficacy generally believe that they are in
control of their own lives, that their own actions and decisions shape
their lives, while people with low self-efficacy may see their lives as
outside their control. For example, a student with high self-efficacy
who does poorly on an exam will likely attribute the failure to the fact
that they did not study enough. However, a student with low
self-efficacy who does poorly on an exam is likely to believe the cause
of that failure was due to the test being too difficult or challenging,
which the student does not control.
Factors affecting self-efficacy
Bandura identifies four factors affecting self-efficacy.
- Experience, or "enactive attainment" – The experience of mastery is the most important factor determining a person's self-efficacy. Success raises self-efficacy, while failure lowers it. According to psychologist Erik Erikson: "Children cannot be fooled by empty praise and condescending encouragement. They may have to accept artificial bolstering of their self-esteem in lieu of something better, but what I call their accruing ego identity gains real strength only from wholehearted and consistent recognition of real accomplishment, that is, achievement that has meaning in their culture."
- Modeling, or "vicarious experience" – Modeling is experienced as, "If they can do it, I can do it as well". When we see someone succeeding, our own self-efficacy increases; where we see people failing, our self-efficacy decreases. This process is most effectual when we see ourselves as similar to the model. Although not as influential as direct experience, modeling is particularly useful for people who are particularly unsure of themselves.
- Social persuasion – Social persuasion generally manifests as direct encouragement or discouragement from another person. Discouragement is generally more effective at decreasing a person's self-efficacy than encouragement is at increasing it.
- Physiological factors – In stressful situations, people commonly exhibit signs of distress: shakes, aches and pains, fatigue, fear, nausea, etc. Perceptions of these responses in oneself can markedly alter self-efficacy. Getting 'butterflies in the stomach' before public speaking will be interpreted by someone with low self-efficacy as a sign of inability, thus decreasing self-efficacy further, where high self-efficacy would lead to interpreting such physiological signs as normal and unrelated to ability. It is one's belief in the implications of physiological response that alters self-efficacy, rather than the physiological response itself.
Genetic and environmental determinants
In a Norwegian twin study, the heritability
of self-efficacy in adolescents was estimated at 75 percent. The
remaining variance, 25 percent, was due to environmental influences not
shared between family members. The shared family environment did not
contribute to individual differences in self-efficacy.
Theoretical models of behavior
A theoretical model of the effect of self-efficacy on transgressive behavior was developed and verified in research with school children.
Prosociality and moral disengagement
Prosocial behavior (such as helping others, sharing, and being kind and cooperative) and moral disengagement (manifesting in behaviors such as making excuses for bad behavior, avoiding responsibility for consequences, and blaming the victim) are negatively correlated. Academic, social, and self-regulatory self-efficacy encourages prosocial behavior, and thus helps prevent moral disengagement.
Over-efficaciousness in learning
In
certain circumstances, lower self-efficacy can be helpful. One study
examined foreign language students' beliefs about learning, goal
attainment, and motivation to continue with language study. It was
concluded that over-efficaciousness negatively affected student
motivation, so that students who believed they were "good at languages"
had less motivation to study.
Health behavior change
Social-cognitive
models of health behavior change cast self-efficacy as predictor,
mediator, or moderator. As a predictor, self-efficacy is supposed to
facilitate the forming of behavioral intentions, the development of
action plans, and the initiation of action. As mediator, self-efficacy
can help prevent relapse to unhealthy behavior. As a moderator, self-efficacy can support the translation of intentions into action.
Possible applications
Academic contexts
Parents'
sense of academic efficacy for their child is linked to their
children's scholastic achievement. If the parents have higher perceived
academic capabilities and aspirations for their child, the child itself
will share those same beliefs. This promotes academic self-efficacy for
the child, and in turn, leads to scholastic achievement. It also leads
to prosocial behavior, and reduces vulnerability to feelings of futility and depression. There is a relationship between low self-efficacy and depression.
In a study, the majority of a group of students questioned felt
they had a difficulty with listening in class situations. Instructors
then helped strengthen their listening skills by making them aware about
how the use of different strategies could produce better outcomes. This
way, their levels of self-efficacy were improved as they continued to
figure out what strategies worked for them.
STEM
Self-efficacy
has proven especially useful for helping undergraduate students to gain
insights into their career development in STEM fields. Self-efficacy theory has been applied to the career area to examine why women are underrepresented in male-dominated STEM fields
such as mathematics, engineering, and science. It was found that gender
differences in self-efficacy expectancies importantly influence the
career-related behaviors and career choices of young women.
Moreover, researchers have reported that mathematics self-efficacy is
more predictive of mathematics interest, choice of math-related courses,
and math majors than past achievements in math or outcome expectations.
Technical self-efficacy was found to be a crucial factor for
teaching computer programming to school students, as students with
higher levels of technological self-efficacy achieve higher learning
outcomes. The effect of technical self-efficacy was found to be even
stronger than the effect of gender.
Writing
Writing studies research indicates a strong relationship linking perceived self-efficacy to motivation and performance outcomes.
Motivation
One of the factors most commonly associated with self-efficacy in writing studies is motivation.
Motivation is often divided into two categories: extrinsic and
intrinsic. McLeod suggests that intrinsic motivators tend to be more
effective than extrinsic motivators because students then perceive the
given task as inherently valuable.
Additionally, McCarthy, Meier, and Rinderer explain that writers who
are intrinsically motivated tend to be more self-directed, take active
control of their writing, and see themselves as more capable of setting
and accomplishing goals.
Furthermore, writing studies research indicates that self-efficacy
influences student choices, effort, persistence, perseverance, thought
patterns, and emotional reactions when completing a writing assignment. Students with a high self-efficacy are more likely to attempt and persist in unfamiliar writing tasks.
Performance outcomes
Self-efficacy
has often been linked to students' writing performance outcomes. More
so than any other element within the cognitive-affective domain,
self-efficacy beliefs have proven to be predictive of performance
outcomes in writing.
In order to assess the relationship between self-efficacy and writing
capabilities, several studies have constructed scales to measure
students' self-efficacy beliefs.
The results of these scales are then compared to student writing
samples. The studies included other variables, such as writing anxiety,
grade goals, depth of processing, and expected outcomes. However,
self-efficacy was the only variable that was a statistically significant
predictor of writing performance.
Public speaking
A strong negative relationship has been suggested between levels of speech anxiety and self-efficacy.
Healthcare
As the focus of healthcare continues to transition from the medical model to health promotion and preventive healthcare,
the role of self-efficacy as a potent influence on health behavior and
self-care has come under review. According to Luszczynska and Schwarzer,
self-efficacy plays a role in influencing the adoption, initiation, and
maintenance of healthy behaviors, as well as curbing unhealthy
practices.
Healthcare providers can integrate self-efficacy interventions
into patient education. One method is to provide examples of other
people acting on a health promotion behavior and then work with the patient to encourage their belief in their own ability to change. Furthermore, when nurses followed-up by telephone after hospital discharge, individuals with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
(COPD) were found to have increased self-efficacy in managing breathing
difficulties. In this study, the nurses helped reinforce education and
reassured patients regarding their self-care management techniques while
in their home environment.
Other contexts
At
the National Kaohsiung First University of Science and Technology in
Taiwan, researchers investigated the correlations between general
Internet self-efficacy (GISE), Web-specific self-efficacy (WSE), and
e-service usage. Researchers concluded that GISE directly affects the
WSE of a consumer, which in turn shows a strong correlation with
e-service usage. These findings are significant for future consumer
targeting and marketing.
Furthermore, self-efficacy has been included as one of the four factors of core self-evaluation, one's fundamental appraisal of oneself, along with locus of control, neuroticism, and self-esteem. Core self-evaluation has shown to predict job satisfaction and job performance.
Researchers have also examined self-efficacy in the context of the work–life interface.
Chan et al. (2016) developed and validated a measure "self-efficacy to
regulate work and life" and defined it as "the belief one has in one’s
own ability to achieve a balance between work and non-work
responsibilities, and to persist and cope with challenges posed by work
and non-work demands" (p. 1758).
Specifically, Chan et al. (2016) found that "self-efficacy to regulate
work and life" helped to explain the relationship between work–family enrichment, work–life balance, and job satisfaction and family satisfaction. Chan et al. (2017) also found that "self-efficacy to regulate work and life" assists individuals to achieve work–life balance and work engagement despite the presence of family and work demands.
Subclassifications
While self-efficacy is sometimes measured as a whole, as with the General Self-Efficacy Scale, it is also measured in particular functional situations.
Social self-efficacy has been variably defined and measured.
According to Smith and Betz, social self-efficacy is "an individual’s
confidence in her/his ability to engage in the social interactional
tasks necessary to initiate and maintain interpersonal relationships."
They measured social self-efficacy using an instrument of their own
devise called the Scale of Perceived Social Self-Efficacy, which
measured six domains: (1) making friends, (2) pursuing romantic
relationships, (3) social assertiveness, (4) performance in public
situations, (5) groups or parties, and (6) giving or receiving help.
More recently, it has been suggested that social self-efficacy can also
be operationalised in terms of cognitive (confidence in knowing what to
do in social situations) and behavioral (confidence in performing in
social situations) social self-efficacy.
Matsushima and Shiomi measured self-efficacy by focusing on
self-confidence about social skill in personal relationship, trust in
friends, and trust by friends.
Researchers suggest that social self-efficacy is strongly correlated with shyness and social anxiety.
Academic self-efficacy refers to the belief that one can
successfully engage in and complete course-specific academic tasks, such
as accomplishing course aims, satisfactorily completing assignments,
achieving a passing grade, and meeting the requirements to continue to
pursue one's major course of study. Various empirical inquiries have been aimed at measuring academic self-efficacy.
Other areas of self-efficacy that have been identified for study include teacher self-efficacy and technological self-efficacy.
Clarifications and distinctions
- Self-efficacy versus Efficacy
- Unlike efficacy, which is the power to produce an effect—in essence, competence—the term self-efficacy is used, by convention, to refer to the belief (accurate or not) that one has the power to produce that effect by completing a given task or activity related to that competency. Self-efficacy is the belief in one's efficacy.
- Self-efficacy versus Self-esteem
- Self-efficacy is the perception of one's own ability to reach a goal; self-esteem is the sense of self-worth. For example, a person who is a terrible rock climber would probably have poor self-efficacy with regard to rock climbing, but this will not affect self-esteem if the person doesn’t rely on rock climbing to determine self-worth. On the other hand, one might have enormous confidence with regard to rock climbing, yet set such a high standard, and base enough of self-worth on rock-climbing skill, that self-esteem is low. Someone who has high self-efficacy in general but is poor at rock climbing might have misplaced confidence, or believe that improvement is possible.
- Self-efficacy versus Confidence
- According to Albert Bandura, "the construct of self-efficacy differs from the colloquial term 'confidence.' Confidence is a nonspecific term that refers to strength of belief but does not necessarily specify what the certainty is about. I can be supremely confident that I will fail at an endeavor. Perceived self-efficacy refers to belief in one's agentive capabilities, that one can produce given levels of attainment. A self-efficacy belief, therefore, includes both an affirmation of a capability level and the strength of that belief.
- Self-efficacy versus Self-concept
- Self-efficacy comprises beliefs of personal capability to perform specific actions. Self-concept is measured more generally and includes the evaluation of such competence and the feelings of self-worth associated with the behaviors in question. In an academic situation, a student's confidence in their ability to write an essay is self-efficacy. Self-concept, on the other hand, could be how a student's level of intelligence affects their beliefs regarding their worth as a person.
- Self-efficacy as part of core self-evaluations
- Timothy A. Judge et al. (2002) has argued that the concepts of locus of control, neuroticism, generalized self-efficacy (which differs from Bandura's theory of self-efficacy) and self-esteem are so strongly correlated and exhibit such a high degree of theoretical overlap that they are actually aspects of the same higher order construct, which he calls core self-evaluations.