
S. OH
240
Midwestern research-extensive university in the United States.
However, this study should be interpreted as a preliminary
phase of a broader stream of research to explore the sources of
preservice teachers’ efficacy and changing levels of their
self-efficacy beliefs.
The findings reported here should be interpreted as the re-
sults of a pilot study conducted to verify the TSES instrument
and Teaching Efficacy Sources Inventory. The Teaching Effi-
cacy Sources Inventory used in this study was developed based
on 4th-year student teachers’ data from two pedagogical de-
partments in Greece. Extending these previous measures to a
substantially different context, the participants in this study
were preservice teachers who were enrolled in their first or
second literacy methods courses at a midwestern state univer-
sity in the United States and who have not yet conducted their
student teaching. Thus, caution is needed in generalizing the
results of this study to preservice teachers who were trained as
teacher candidates in teacher preparation program in the United
States. Contextual variables contributing to analysis of the
teaching task consequently would play a stronger role in stu-
dent teachers’ sense of efficacy than for more experienced
teachers. So, future research could examine what aspects of the
teaching environment and context affect novice teachers’ sense
of efficacy. There is a need for greater understanding about
how the various kinds of context variables, such as school level
and setting, the quality of the school facilities, the availability
of teaching resources, and interpersonal support from parents
and the community, are linked to higher teaching efficacy.
Conclusion
In sum, the findings of this study revealed potential sources
of preservice teachers’ sense of efficacy that were not included
in previous measurement inventories, such as personality char-
acteristics, capabilities/skills, and motivation to improve pre-
service teachers’ teaching efficacy. Notwithstanding the fact
that it is necessary to understand more and less important
sources that teachers consider when making efficacy judgments
about their capability for instruction and classroom manage-
ment, little research has examined the various potential vari-
ables that influence teachers’ sense of efficacy. The results of
this study have extended the results of Bandura’s (1997) previ-
ous research, in which the four experiential sources of personal
performance accomplishments, vicarious learning or modeling,
emotional arousal (anxiety), and social persuasion and encour-
agement were important to the initial development of self-effi-
cacy expectations. The findings of this study highlight the im-
portance of preservice teachers’ personality characteristics,
capabilities, and motivation as potential sources of teaching
efficacy.
Also, the results of Pearson product-moment correlations in
this study indicated that efficacy for efficacy for instructional
strategies, classroom management, and student engagement
were significantly related to each other in the pre-test data for
this sample of preservice teachers in the United States. This
implies that the three self-efficacy dimensions together measure
a single underlying latent construct of self-efficacy.
Teacher self-efficacy is a crucial factor in improving teacher
education and promoting education reform because high
teacher self-efficacy consistently has been found to relate to
positive student and teacher behaviors. Thus, teacher educators
need to consider all sources of information that influence pro-
spective teachers’ efficacy beliefs if prospective teachers’ effi-
cacy is to be enhanced during teacher education programs. For
high levels of prospective teachers’ efficacy, university teacher
education programs should provide positive information from
vicarious experience, social persuasion, and a form of mastery
experience offered by student colleagues, cooperating teachers,
and university supervisors. In addition, the fact that the three
dimensions of self-efficacy were highly intercorrelated suggests
that future research in this area could be undertaken using
structural equation modeling approaches in which self-efficacy
is treated as a latent trait with three underlying constructs.
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