Effect of Academic Self-Efficacy on Test Anxiety of Higher Vocational College Students: The Chain Mediating Effect

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Abstract

Objective: This study aimed to investigate the impact of academic self-efficacy on test anxiety among higher vocational students, awell as the role of sense of life meaning, fear of failure, and gender difference in mediating this relationship. Methods: A total of 2231 higher vocational students from Shandong Province were surveyed by means of Academic Self-efficacQuestionnaire, Meaning in Life Questionnaire, and Test Anxiety Scale. Results: There were significant negative correlations among academic self-efficacy, sense of life meaning, and test anxiety. Fear ofailure was positively correlated with test anxiety. Sense of life meaning and fear of failure played a mediating role in the relationshibetween academic self-efficacy and test anxiety. The chain mediating effect was significant only in the female group, not in the malgroup. In contrast, academic self-efficacy indirectly predicted test anxiety by the independent mediating effect of sense of life meaninor fear of failure in the male group. Conclusion: Academic self-efficacy may influence test anxiety through the independent mediating effect of sense of life meaningfear of failure, and the chain mediating effect, and there is a gender difference in these effects.

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APA

Jia, J., Ma, Y., Xu, S., Zheng, J., Ma, X., Zhang, Y., … Liu, L. (2023). Effect of Academic Self-Efficacy on Test Anxiety of Higher Vocational College Students: The Chain Mediating Effect. Psychology Research and Behavior Management, 16, 2417–2424. https://doi.org/10.2147/PRBM.S413382

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