Effects of Career Decision-Making Self-Efficacy and Degree Utility on Student Persistence: A Path Analytic Study

A path model was constructed mapping the effect of career decision-making self-efficacy (CDMSE) and degree utility on persistence of underprepared college students. The path model accounted for 21 percent of the variance in intent to persist and 27 percent of the variance in student persistence. The...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of college student retention : Research, theory & practice theory & practice, 2001-11, Vol.3 (3), p.285-299
Hauptverfasser: Peterson, Shari L., Delmas, Robert C.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A path model was constructed mapping the effect of career decision-making self-efficacy (CDMSE) and degree utility on persistence of underprepared college students. The path model accounted for 21 percent of the variance in intent to persist and 27 percent of the variance in student persistence. The final structural model adds to the literature on student persistence in several ways. First, it suggests the importance of Degree Utility for this population: Students who believed college would provide employment opportunities and better careers were more likely to persist. Second, it confirms that CDMSE has a direct effect on social and academic integration and an indirect effect on persistence. Implications for research include developing and testing interventions to enhance CDMSE. Implications for practice include providing career counseling and advising that identifies the connection between employment opportunities and academic course, program, or degree completion and engaging in practices that increase CDMSE.
ISSN:1521-0251
1541-4167
DOI:10.2190/4D9V-DFW1-VDLX-K7GF