英文摘要 |
This study reviewed relevant research on self-efficacy and its theories, and summarized the connotative framework of self-efficacy to establish a meta-analysis basis. Using the framework, it conducted a meta-analysis of 74 studies on the correlation between self-efficacy and academic achievement in Taiwan during 2002-2020. By quantitatively way, it integrated previous studies that have not been included, such as the academic achievement of gifted students, non-paper-and-pencil tests ... etc. to obtain a clear research situation. Besides, by exploring 9 moderating variables, such as student status, learning stage, self-efficacy type, ...etc, it compared the differences in the impact of correlation. The results are as follows:1.Among overall students' self-efficacy and academic achievement, there was a significant positive correlation, and the effect value ranged from low to moderate. The learning stage, the dimensions of self-efficacy measurement tools, the type of academic achievement, and the type of research were the important moderating variables that influence the correlation. In the school stage, elementary school was higher than junior high school and college. In the dimension of self-efficacy measurement tools, multi-dimensionality was higher than one-dimensionality. In the academic achievement type,other types was higher than language and humanities. In the type of research, the dissertation was higher than the journal.2.The number of relevant studies targeting gifted students is small. Most Researches used general self-efficacy as analysis, and the self-efficacy measurement tool adopted a one-dimensional structure. Besides, there was a lack of research in the field of language and humanities.3.Among self-efficacy and academic achievement, there was no significant correlation difference between gifted and normal students. It also found that at the junior high school stage, the normal students' correlation is significantly higher than gifted students. In other moderating variables, there are no significant differences. |