Self-efficacy belief as a practical and parsimonious evaluation criterion in school leadership training

Training evaluation is often neglected in educational leadership trainings due to many constraints surrounding it. One such constraint is difficulty in identifying and utilizing a parsimonious, result-oriented and psychometrically sound evaluation criterion. This study utilized self-efficacy beliefs...

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Main Authors: Anthony, Santhanamary, Said, Hamdan, Mohamad, Ismail, Mokhtar, Mahani
Format: Article
Published: MCSER-Mediterranean Center of Social and Educational research 2015
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Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/55418/
http://dx.doi.org/10.5901/mjss.2015.v6n1s1p20
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spelling my.utm.554182016-09-04T02:30:17Z http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/55418/ Self-efficacy belief as a practical and parsimonious evaluation criterion in school leadership training Anthony, Santhanamary Said, Hamdan Mohamad, Ismail Mokhtar, Mahani TA Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) Training evaluation is often neglected in educational leadership trainings due to many constraints surrounding it. One such constraint is difficulty in identifying and utilizing a parsimonious, result-oriented and psychometrically sound evaluation criterion. This study utilized self-efficacy beliefs as a practical and parsimonious evaluation criterion to explore the effectiveness of the aspiring school leaders’ (ASL) preparatory training in developing their self-efficacy beliefs in school leadership. The study measured the changes in the post-training self-efficacy beliefs of the ASLs as the indicator of training effectiveness. The Principal Self Efficacy Scale (PSES) was used on a sample of 226 ASLs to identify their beliefs in their abilities to accomplish aspects of school leadership. Generally, the findings of the Mc Nemar Bowker Test revealed that the training was not effective in enhancing the self-efficacy beliefs of the ASLs. Further analysis revealed a pattern which indicated those with lower selfefficacy benefited more from the training. This evaluation method utilizing self-efficacy beliefs was found to be useful with respect to theory and practice in other fields and is still largely unexplored and not given due consideration in leadership trainings. This research attempted to fill this void in school leadership especially in the Malaysian context. MCSER-Mediterranean Center of Social and Educational research 2015-01-01 Article PeerReviewed Anthony, Santhanamary and Said, Hamdan and Mohamad, Ismail and Mokhtar, Mahani (2015) Self-efficacy belief as a practical and parsimonious evaluation criterion in school leadership training. Mediterranean Journal of Social Sciences, 6 (1S1). pp. 20-29. ISSN 2039-9340 http://dx.doi.org/10.5901/mjss.2015.v6n1s1p20 DOI:10.5901/mjss.2015.v6n1s1p20
institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
building UTM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
content_source UTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utm.my/
topic TA Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General)
spellingShingle TA Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General)
Anthony, Santhanamary
Said, Hamdan
Mohamad, Ismail
Mokhtar, Mahani
Self-efficacy belief as a practical and parsimonious evaluation criterion in school leadership training
description Training evaluation is often neglected in educational leadership trainings due to many constraints surrounding it. One such constraint is difficulty in identifying and utilizing a parsimonious, result-oriented and psychometrically sound evaluation criterion. This study utilized self-efficacy beliefs as a practical and parsimonious evaluation criterion to explore the effectiveness of the aspiring school leaders’ (ASL) preparatory training in developing their self-efficacy beliefs in school leadership. The study measured the changes in the post-training self-efficacy beliefs of the ASLs as the indicator of training effectiveness. The Principal Self Efficacy Scale (PSES) was used on a sample of 226 ASLs to identify their beliefs in their abilities to accomplish aspects of school leadership. Generally, the findings of the Mc Nemar Bowker Test revealed that the training was not effective in enhancing the self-efficacy beliefs of the ASLs. Further analysis revealed a pattern which indicated those with lower selfefficacy benefited more from the training. This evaluation method utilizing self-efficacy beliefs was found to be useful with respect to theory and practice in other fields and is still largely unexplored and not given due consideration in leadership trainings. This research attempted to fill this void in school leadership especially in the Malaysian context.
format Article
author Anthony, Santhanamary
Said, Hamdan
Mohamad, Ismail
Mokhtar, Mahani
author_facet Anthony, Santhanamary
Said, Hamdan
Mohamad, Ismail
Mokhtar, Mahani
author_sort Anthony, Santhanamary
title Self-efficacy belief as a practical and parsimonious evaluation criterion in school leadership training
title_short Self-efficacy belief as a practical and parsimonious evaluation criterion in school leadership training
title_full Self-efficacy belief as a practical and parsimonious evaluation criterion in school leadership training
title_fullStr Self-efficacy belief as a practical and parsimonious evaluation criterion in school leadership training
title_full_unstemmed Self-efficacy belief as a practical and parsimonious evaluation criterion in school leadership training
title_sort self-efficacy belief as a practical and parsimonious evaluation criterion in school leadership training
publisher MCSER-Mediterranean Center of Social and Educational research
publishDate 2015
url http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/55418/
http://dx.doi.org/10.5901/mjss.2015.v6n1s1p20
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score 13.211508