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College Student Self-Efficacy Research Studies offers three uniquely designed sections that provide a unique mixture of research studies conducted on African American, Mexican American, and first-generation college students. This book explores a variety of factors affecting a diverse group of college students including institutional commitment, college adjustment, and social and academic self-efficacy barriers.
Terence Hicks is the dean of the Whitlowe R. Green College of Education and a tenured full professor in the Department of Educational Leadership and Counseling at Prairie View A&M University. Michael McFrazier is the vice president for administration at Prairie View A&M University.
ForewordAcknowledgmentsIntroductionSection OneChapter One—The Effect of Self-Efficacy on Academic and Social Integration:An Investigation of Students of Color in the Community College J. Luke Wood, Ph.D., San Diego State UniversityAdriel A. Hilton, Ph.D., Grand Valley State UniversityRoyel M. Johnson, M.Ed., The Ohio State UniversityChapter Two—Influences of Individual Career Counseling on College Students’ Career Decision-Making Self-EfficacyJulia Panke Makela, Ph.D., University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Chapter Three—The Role of Social Self-Efficacy in College Adjustment Among First-Year College StudentsAllison L. Bitz, Ph.D., Nebraska-Wesleyan UniversitySection TwoChapter Four—How I Got Over: Reflective Self-Efficacy ofRecent College GraduatesRikeska L. Fry Brown, Ph.D., Kindred Family Wellness GroupEdward Collins, Ph.D., University of Nevada—Las VegasJarvis M. Watson, Ed.D., Stony Brook UniversityDionica Bell, B.S., San Diego State UniversityCandice N. Crowell, M.S., University of Georgia Chapter Five—Africentric Developments of Self-Efficacy Among African American Undergraduate College StudentsHassiem Kambui,Ph.D.,Florida A&M UniversityAngel Dowden, Ph.D., North Carolina A&T State UniversityChapter Six—An Examination of the Sources of Academic Self-Efficacy Among College Students at a HBCU: Classifications and Gender Comparisons Douglas M. Butler, Ph.D., Prairie View A&M UniversityPeter Metofe, Ed.D., Prairie View A&M University Larchin Leslie, M.S., Prairie View A&M UniversitySection ThreeChapter Seven—Culture Counts: Enhancing Non-Cognitive Assessment for Predicting Retention and Academic Success in a Sample of African American College Students Taisha L. Caldwell, Ph.D., University of CaliforniaMeera Komarraju, Ph.D., Southern Illinois University—CarbondaleChapter Eight—Misconceptions of Family Support Among First-Generation African American and Mexican American StudentsPamela Larde, Ph.D., Mercer UniversityIndexContributorsEditors
“What Hicks and McFrazier offer in this critically important tome not only adds to the empirical research literature on self-efficacy among Black college student cohorts, but also situates while at the same time foregrounds the relevance of efficacious behaviors for these cohorts in a diverse array of higher education contexts. The cutting-edge scholarship in this book is certain to spark discourse on this topic for many years to come.”