Measuring differences in Current Academic Learning Self-Efficacy (CAL-SE) and Current Academic Exam Self-Efficacy (CAE-SE) for social science students: a Rasch-based multi degree program validity study
Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Book chapter › Research › peer-review
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Measuring differences in Current Academic Learning Self-Efficacy (CAL-SE) and Current Academic Exam Self-Efficacy (CAE-SE) for social science students: a Rasch-based multi degree program validity study. / Nielsen, Tine.
Research on Teaching and Learning in Higher Education. ed. / Edith Braun; Rachelle Esterhazy; Robert Kordts-Freudinger. 978-3-8309-4026-5 : Waxmann Verlag, 2021. p. 57-81.Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Book chapter › Research › peer-review
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TY - CHAP
T1 - Measuring differences in Current Academic Learning Self-Efficacy (CAL-SE) and Current Academic Exam Self-Efficacy (CAE-SE) for social science students: a Rasch-based multi degree program validity study
AU - Nielsen, Tine
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - The aim of the study was to evaluate the construct validity and psychometric properties of two short scales intended to measure Current Academic Learning Self-Efficacy (CAL-SE) and Current Academic Exam Self-Efficacy (CAE-SE) using Rasch measurement models, and to investigate whether these differed across four degree programs. Data consisted of 643 Danish undergraduate students two universities. Item analyses showed both the CAL-SE and the CAE-SE scales to fit graphical loglinear Rasch models. In the CAL-SE scale two items were locally dependent. In the CAE-SE scale, two item pairs were locally dependent, and one item functioned differentially relative to degree program. Reliability of both scales was satisfactory for statistical purposes with relatively large samples. Targeting was good for both scales. Economy students scored significantly lower than the joint group of law, psychology and political science students, both with regard to current academic learning self-efficacy and current academic exam self-efficacy.
AB - The aim of the study was to evaluate the construct validity and psychometric properties of two short scales intended to measure Current Academic Learning Self-Efficacy (CAL-SE) and Current Academic Exam Self-Efficacy (CAE-SE) using Rasch measurement models, and to investigate whether these differed across four degree programs. Data consisted of 643 Danish undergraduate students two universities. Item analyses showed both the CAL-SE and the CAE-SE scales to fit graphical loglinear Rasch models. In the CAL-SE scale two items were locally dependent. In the CAE-SE scale, two item pairs were locally dependent, and one item functioned differentially relative to degree program. Reliability of both scales was satisfactory for statistical purposes with relatively large samples. Targeting was good for both scales. Economy students scored significantly lower than the joint group of law, psychology and political science students, both with regard to current academic learning self-efficacy and current academic exam self-efficacy.
M3 - Book chapter
SP - 57
EP - 81
BT - Research on Teaching and Learning in Higher Education
A2 - Braun, Edith
A2 - Esterhazy, Rachelle
A2 - Kordts-Freudinger, Robert
PB - Waxmann Verlag
CY - 978-3-8309-4026-5
ER -
ID: 242664634