Home Vol. 15(1) Spring 08 General Perceived Self-Efficacy of Iranian College of Agriculture Students
General Perceived Self-Efficacy of Iranian College of Agriculture Students
Written by Kiumars Zarafshani, Neil A. Knobloch, Hossain Aghahi   

Abstract

This exploratory descriptive study examined the utility of the social cognitive theory in assessing generalized perceived self-efficacy of agricultural students at Razi University. Two hundred college students majoring in agricultural extension, plant science, animal science, water engineering, and crop science participated in the descriptive survey. Agricultural students were efficacious in handling challenging tasks in diverse situations. Male students were more efficacious than the female students. There were no significant differences in general self-efficacy scores across student classifications and majors. Implications of gender differences are discussed.

Keywords

Domain-specific Self-efficacy, Global Competency, Social-cognitive Career Theory, Social Cognitive Theory, Problem-Solving

 


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