Determinants of Persistence Among Science Teacher-Trainees:
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Journal of Science Teacher Education
Abstract
Grounded in the expectancy-value and hope theories, the present
study was conducted to examine the extent to which self-efficacy,
task value, and academic hope predict persistence among science
teacher-trainees in Uganda. The sample consisted of 278 undergraduate
science teacher-trainees selected from a large public university
in northern Uganda. Data were collected using several scales from
the modified Motivated Strategies for Learning Questionnaire,
Academic Hope Scale, and College Persistence Questionnaire and
analyzed using structural equation modeling. Task value and academic
hope significantly predicted students’ persistence. Academic
hope made a greater contribution to students’ persistence compared
to task value. The combined effect of task value and academic hope
did not make any significant contribution to students’ persistence.
The study highlights the need to strengthen students’ hopeful thinking
and task value in order to increase their chances of completing
their studies. Implications of the study findings for educational practice
and for the training of science teacher-trainees are elaborated in
the article.
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Citation
Muwonge, C. M., Schiefele, U., Ssenyonga, J., & Kibedi, H. (2017). Determinants of persistence among science teacher-trainees: Examining the role of self-efficacy, task value, and academic hope. Journal of Science Teacher Education, 28(6), 522-548.