According to self-efficacy theory, self-efficacy—defined as perceived
capability to perform a behavior—causally influences
expected outcomes of behavior, but not vice versa.
However, research has shown that expected outcomes causally influence
self-efficacy
judgments, and some authors have argued that this
relationship invalidates self-efficacy theory. Bandura has rebutted
those
arguments saying that self-efficacy judgments are
not invalidated when influenced by expected outcomes. This article
focuses
on a contradiction in Bandura’s rebuttal.
Specifically, Bandura has argued (a) expected outcomes cannot causally
influence
self-efficacy, but (b) self-efficacy judgments
remain valid when causally influenced by expected outcomes. While the
debate
regarding outcome expectancies and self-efficacy
has subsided in recent years, the inattention to this contradiction has
led
to a disproportionate focus on self-efficacy as a
causal determinant of behavior at the expense of expected outcomes.
Link: http://psr.sagepub.com/content/14/4/417.refs
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