Self- and collective-efficacy beliefs were examined as main determinants of teachers' job satisfaction. In 103 Italian junior high schools, 2,688 teachers filled out self-reports to assess self-efficacy beliefs, their perceptions of the extent to which other school constituencies, namely, the principal, colleagues, staff, students, and families, were behaving in accordance with their obligations toward school well-functioning, their collective-efficacy beliefs, and their job satisfaction. Multilevel structural equation modeling analyse's corroborated a conceptual model in which individual and collective-efficacy beliefs represent, respectively, the distal and proximal determinants of teachers' job satisfaction. The perceptions that teachers have of other constituencies' behavior largely mediated the links between self- and collective-efficacy beliefs. Collective-efficacy beliefs, in turn, partially mediated the influence that teachers' perceptions of other school constituencies' behavior exerts on their own job satisfaction

Caprara, G., Barbaranelli, C., Borgogni, L., Steca, P. (2003). Efficacy Beliefs as Determinants of Teachers' Job Satisfaction. JOURNAL OF EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY, 95(4), 821-832 [10.1037/0022-0663.95.4.821].

Efficacy Beliefs as Determinants of Teachers' Job Satisfaction

STECA, PATRIZIA
2003

Abstract

Self- and collective-efficacy beliefs were examined as main determinants of teachers' job satisfaction. In 103 Italian junior high schools, 2,688 teachers filled out self-reports to assess self-efficacy beliefs, their perceptions of the extent to which other school constituencies, namely, the principal, colleagues, staff, students, and families, were behaving in accordance with their obligations toward school well-functioning, their collective-efficacy beliefs, and their job satisfaction. Multilevel structural equation modeling analyse's corroborated a conceptual model in which individual and collective-efficacy beliefs represent, respectively, the distal and proximal determinants of teachers' job satisfaction. The perceptions that teachers have of other constituencies' behavior largely mediated the links between self- and collective-efficacy beliefs. Collective-efficacy beliefs, in turn, partially mediated the influence that teachers' perceptions of other school constituencies' behavior exerts on their own job satisfaction
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Perceived Self-Efficacy; Social-Cognitive Theory; Collective-Efficacy; Multilevel Analysis; Performance; Attitudes; Metaanalysis; Outcomes; Schools; Impact
English
2003
95
4
821
832
none
Caprara, G., Barbaranelli, C., Borgogni, L., Steca, P. (2003). Efficacy Beliefs as Determinants of Teachers' Job Satisfaction. JOURNAL OF EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY, 95(4), 821-832 [10.1037/0022-0663.95.4.821].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/1623
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