Most studies have concentrated in assessing students’ overall attitudes towards science, mathematics, and engi-neering/technology or the attitude towards individual STEM domain. The present research aims to explore primary students’ gender and grade differences of their STEM domain-specific attitudes including self-ef-ficacy and expectancy-value beliefs, as well as their correlations. The results showed no detected significant effects among these different STEM domains in the overall attitudes, the overall self-efficacy beliefs, and the overall expectancy-value beliefs for primary students. The correlations between self-efficacy and expectancy-value were much stronger for the science domain and engineering/technology domain than the mathematics domain. No gender difference of the self-efficacy beliefs was detected except in the mathematics domain, and the result that lower primary students performed significantly better than upper primary students in the self-efficacy was also mainly contributed by the grade difference in the mathematics domain. Whereas no different expectancy-value beliefs existed across genders and grade levels in various STEM domains. The present results reported some unique performances by the primary school students compared to the elder group.
CITATION STYLE
Zhou, S. N., Chen, L. C., Xu, S. R., Lu, C. T., Li, Q. Y., & Li, D. A. (2021). Primary students’ performance of stem domain-specific self-efficacy belief and expectancy-value belief. Journal of Baltic Science Education, 20(4), 677–690. https://doi.org/10.33225/jbse/21.20.677
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