4.3 Article

School Connectedness, Academic Self-Efficacy, and Academic Performance: Mediating Role of Hope

Journal

PSYCHOLOGICAL REPORTS
Volume 125, Issue 4, Pages 2052-2068

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/00332941211006926

Keywords

School connectedness; academic self-efficacy; academic performance; hope; high-school students

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The study revealed that school connectedness and academic self-efficacy beliefs have significant impacts on academic performance of high school students, with hope mediating these effects. There is a positive and significant relationship among school connectedness, academic self-efficacy beliefs, and hope in relation to academic performance.
The present study explored the effects of school connectedness and academic self-efficacy beliefs on academic performance among male and female high school students. It was hypothesized that hope would mediate the effects of school connectedness and academic self-efficacy beliefs on academic performance. The statistical population of the study included all high school students in a city of Iran, from whom 500 individuals were selected as the study sample using multistage random sampling. To collect the required data, three questionnaires - i.e., academic self-efficacy subscale from the Patterns of Adaptive Learning Scale by Midgley et al., Children's Hope Scale by Snyder et al., and Brown and Evans' School Connectedness Scale - were used. Structural equation modeling (SEM) was also applied to evaluate the proposed model, and the results indicated the statistical significance of all the path coefficients between the variables. The model showed the positive and significant relation of school connectedness, academic self-efficacy beliefs, and hope with academic performance and the relation of school connectedness and academic self-efficacy beliefs with hope. The fit indices showed that the model was well-fitted. Furthermore, the significance of all the indirect relationships was also confirmed. We concluded that, the high levels of school connectedness and academic self-efficacy are associated with high academic performance and hope seems to be an important mediator of these relationships.

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