A Correlational-Comparative Study of Grade 3 and Grade 4 Students’ Self-Efficacy for and Enjoyment of Learning Mathematics at a Catholic School in Bangkok, Thailand
Abstract
This study aimed to investigate the levels of Grade 3 and Grade 4 students’ self-efficacy for and enjoyment of learning mathematics and to determine whether there was a significant difference or a significant relationship among them at a Catholic school in Bangkok, Thailand. The study was conducted with 46 Grade 3 students and 51 Grade 4 students in the 2019 academic year. The research design was a quantitative correlational-comparative study. The research instrument utilized was the Self-Efficacy for and Enjoyment of Learning Mathematics Questionnaire (SEELMQ), adapted from the Math and Me Survey (Adelson & McCoach, 2011). Descriptive statistics, dependent samples t-tests, independent samples t-tests, and Pearson’s correlation coefficient analysis were used to analyze the data. The findings revealed no significant difference between Grade 3 and Grade 4 students’ self-efficacy for and enjoyment of learning mathematics, but there was a significant difference between students’ self-efficacy for and enjoyment of learning mathematics within their Grade level. Students’ self-efficacy was in a moderate level and students’ enjoyment was in a high level. Moreover, the study revealed a positive strong relationship between students’ self-efficacy for and enjoyment of learning mathematics. Recommendations for school administrators, mathematics teachers, students, parents, and future researchers were provided.References
Adelson, J. L., & McCoach, D. B. (2011). Development and Psychometric Properties of the Math and Me Survey: Measuring Third Through Sixth Graders’ Attitudes Toward Mathematics. Measurement and Evaluation in Counseling and Development, 44(4), 225-247.
Bandura, A. (1986). From thought to action: Mechanisms of personal agency. New Zealand Journal of Psychology, 15, 1-17.
Bandura, A. (1997). Self-efficacy: The exercise of control (pp. 1-78). New York, NY, US: W.H. Freeman and Company.
Brockman, G. (2006). What factors influence achievement in remedial mathematics classes? California: ProQuest Dissertations Publishing.
Cheema, J. R. (2018). Effect of math-specific self-efficacy on math literacy: Evidence from a Greek survey. Research in Education, 102(1), 13-36
Gottfried, A. E., Marcoulides, G. A., Gottfried, A. W., Oliver, P. H., & Guerin, D. W. (2007). Multivariate latent change modeling of developmental decline in academic intrinsic math motivation and achievement: Childhood through adolescence. International Journal of Behavioral Development, 31(4), 317-327.
Kılıçoğlu, G. (2018). Study on the Relationship between Social Studies Course Self-Efficacy and Motivation Levels of Secondary School Students. Universal Journal of Educational Research, 6(8), 1743-1748.
Klainin, S. (2015). Mathematics education at school level in Thailand The development-The impact-The dilemmas. Retrieved from https://library.ipst.ac.th/bitstream/handle/ipst/959/Mathematics%20 education%20at%20school%20level%20in%20 Thailand%282015%29.pdf?sequence=1 &isAllowed=y
Lähtevänoja, A., & Penttinen, S. (2008). Mathematics Related Self-Efficacy Beliefs and Task-Motivation and Associations with Mathematics Fluency Development: A Longitudinal Study of Children from 1st Grade to 2nd Grade (Unpublished master’s thesis). University of Jyväskylä, Finland.
Liu, X., & Koirala, H. (2009). The Effect of Mathematics Self-Efficacy on Mathematics Achievement of High School Students. NERA Conference Proceedings 2009.
Pajares, F. (2002). Overview of social cognitive theory and of self-efficacy. Retrieved from https://www.uky.edu/~eushe2/Pajares/eff.html
Phan, H. P. (2012), The Development of English and Mathematics Self-Efficacy: A Latent Growth Curve Analysis. The Journal of Educational Research, 105(3), 196-209
PISA Thailand. (2019). PISA 2018 Summary Report. Retrieved from https://pisathailand.ipst.ac.th/pisa2018-summary-result/
Raccanello, D., Brondino, M., Moè, M., Stupnisky, R.H., & Lichtenfeld, S. (2018). Enjoyment, boredom, anxiety in elementary schools in two domains: relations with achievement. Journal of experimental education, 87(3), 449-469.
Roseken, B., Hannula, M. S., & Pehkonen, E. (2011). Dimensions of students’ views of themselves as learners of mathematics. ZDM: the international journal on mathematics education, 43(4), 497-506.
Ryan, R. M., & Deci , E. L. (2000). Self-Determination Theory and the Facilitation of Intrinsic Motivation, Social Development, and Well-Being. American Psychologist, 55(1), 68-78.
Skaalvik, E. M., Federici, R. A., & Klassen, R. M. (2015). Mathematics achievement and self-efficacy: Relations with motivation for mathematics. International Journal of Educational Research, 72, 129-136.
Stipek, D. (1996). Motivation and instruction. In D. Berliner & R. Calfee (Eds.), Handbook of educational psychology (pp. 85-113). New York: Macmillan.
Zimmerman, B. J. (2000). Self-Efficacy: An Essential Motive to Learn. Contemporary Educational Psychology, 25(1), 82–91.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
The submitting author warrants that the submission is original and that she/he is the author of the submission together with the named co-authors; to the extend the submission incorporates text passages, figures, data, or other material from the work of others, the submitting author has obtained any necessary permission.
Articles in this journal are published under the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC-BY What does this mean?). This is to get more legal certainty about what readers can do with published articles, and thus a wider dissemination and archiving, which in turn makes publishing with this journal more valuable for you, the authors.