Frank Pajares

2 articles
Emory University
Affiliations: Emory University (1)

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Who Reads Pajares

Frank Pajares's work travels primarily in Composition & Writing Studies (50% of indexed citations) · 12 total indexed citations from 4 clusters.

By cluster

  • Composition & Writing Studies — 6
  • Rhetoric — 2
  • Other / unclustered — 2
  • Technical Communication — 2

Counts include only citations from indexed journals that deposit reference lists with CrossRef. Authors whose readers publish primarily in venues without reference deposits will appear less central than they are. See coverage notes →

  1. Sources of Writing Self-Efficacy Beliefs of Elementary, Middle, and High School Students
    Abstract

    The purpose of this study was to examine the influence of Albert Bandura’s four hypothesized sources of self-efficacy on students’ writing self-efficacy beliefs (N = 1256) and to explore how these sources differ as a function of gender and academic level (elementary, middle, high). Consistent with the tenets of self-efficacy theory, each of the sources significantly correlated with writing self-efficacy and with each other.

    doi:10.58680/rte20076485
  2. Confidence and Competence in Writing: The Role of Self-Efficacy, Outcome Expectancy, and Apprehension
    Abstract

    This study investigated the relationships among self-confidence about writing, expected outcomes, writing apprehension, general self-confidence, and writing performance in 30 undergraduate preservice teachers over one semester. Results supported social cognitive theory and prior findings reporting a relationship between confidence in one’s writing abilities and subsequentw riting performance. A regression model consisting of the variables noted above and a pre-performance measure accounted for 68% of the variance in writing performance. Students’ beliefs about their own composition skills and the pre-performance measure were the only significant predictors. Writing apprehension was negatively correlated with writing self-confidence but was not predictive of writing performance. General self-confidence was correlated with writing self-confidence, expected outcomes, apprehension, and performance but was not predictive of writing performance in the regression model. Results and implications are discussed, especially as they relate to the need for context-specific assessments of confidence in one’s own capabilities and to pedagogical obligations.

    📍 Emory University
    doi:10.58680/rte199415378