Cogent Education (Dec 2024)

I (don’t) need to know that I can make it. Socioeconomic differences in the link between students’ academic self-efficacy and their educational aspirations and decisions

  • Max P. Jansen,
  • Birgit Becker,
  • Zerrin Salikutluk,
  • Susanne Garritzmann,
  • Sigrid Roßteutscher

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/2331186X.2024.2355006
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1

Abstract

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Students from a high socioeconomic background show relatively homogeneous, high levels of educational attainment, whereas students with a low socioeconomic origin display a large variability in their educational careers. In this paper, we examine whether the varying degrees of students’ academic self-efficacy can contribute to an explanation of this variation. Focusing on Germany’s highly stratified educational system, we utilized the CILS4EU dataset to analyse the association between the academic self-efficacy of students from low and high socioeconomic backgrounds in 9th grade and their later educational aspirations and transitions. Our results show that students from non-academic families are much more likely to (a) aspire to an Abitur, (b) transition to upper secondary school, and (c) enter tertiary education if they exhibit a high level of academic self-efficacy. In contrast, academic self-efficacy shows no link to the educational aspirations and decisions of students who have at least one parent with an academic certificate.

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