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Self-efficacy : the exercise of control | WorldCat.org

The nature of human agency

Human agency in triadic reciprocal causation

Determinism and the exercise of self-influence

Related views of personal efficacy

Perceived self-efficacy as a generative capability

Active producers versus passive foretellers of performances

The self-efficacy approach to personal causation

Multidimensionality of self-efficacy belief systems

Self-efficacy causality

Sources of discordance between efficacy judgment and action

Enactive mastery experience

Vicarious experience

Verbal persuasion

Physiological and affective states

Integration of efficacy information

Cognitive processes

Motivational processes

Affective processes

Selection processes

Origins of a sense of personal agency

Familial sources of self-efficacy

Peers and the broadening and validation of self-efficacy

School as an agency for cultivating self-efficacy

Growth of self-efficacy through transitional experiences of adolescence

Self-efficacy concerns of adulthood

Reappraisals of self-efficacy with advancing age. Students' cognitive self-efficacy

Teachers' perceived efficacy

Collective school efficacy

Biological effects of perceived self-efficacy

Perceived self-efficacy in health promoting behavior

Prognostic judgments and perceived self-efficacy

Anxiety and phobic dysfunctions

Depression

Eating disorders

Alcohol and drug abuse

Development of athletic skills

Self-regulation of athletic performance

Collective team efficacy

Psychobiological effects of physical exercise

Career development and pursuits

Mastery of occupational roles

Self-efficacy in organizational decision making

Self-efficacy in enactment of occupational roles

Collective organizational efficacy

Gauging collective efficacy

Political efficacy

Enablement by media modes of influence

Enablement for sociocultural change

Underminers of collective efficacy