• Home
  • About
  • Login
  • Register
  • Search
  • Archive
  • Announcements
  • Editorial Board
MAIN MENU
  • Home
  • About
  • Login
  • Register
  • Search
  • Current
  • Browse
  • Announcements
  • Submit
  • Editorial Board

MAGISTER SCIENTIAE

ABOUT THE JOURNAL
Authors Guidelines
Focus and Scope
Editorial Board
Reviewer
Open Access Policy
Publication Ethics
Peer Review Process
Announcements
Contact Us

Visitors (since November 13th, 2017):

 

View Magister Scientiae Stats
Flag Counter

About The Author

Yuni Astuti
Brawijaya University Malang
Indonesia

User
Journal Content

Browse
  • By Issue
  • By Author
  • By Title
  • Other Journals
Information
  • For Readers
  • For Authors
  • For Librarians
Keywords Early Childhood teachers, readiness and involvement, online learning English vocabulary, Quizlet, students’ attitudes ICT, ICT literacy, TPACK, English teaching, generation Z Intelligence Quotient (IQ), Emotional Quotient (EQ), Spiritual Quotient (SQ), Speaking Proficiency, Indonesian Adults. Speaking, Textbook, Content Feasibility causal-comparative cloze technique distance learning, early childhood, early childhood education teacher eleventh graders higher-order thinking intermediate listening junior high school language learning strategies, high achievers, low achievers online learning reading ability reading comprehension questions reading proficiency self-efficacy students’ perspectives writing self-efficacy young learners, speaking, role-play
Home > No 45 (2019) > Astuti

THE INFLUENCE OF ACHIEVEMENT MOTIVATION AND ACADEMIC SELF-EFFICACY ON SPEAKING PROFICIENCY

Yuni Astuti

Abstract


This quantitative study employs a correlational design that is to find out the relationship among achievement motivation, academic selfefficacy and the students’ speaking performance. Two questionnaires with four likert-scale were used to measure the students’ level in this study. Based on the result of the data analysis about the relationship among the variables, some points could be concluded. First, there was a significant average positive correlation between achievement motivation level and the students’ speaking performance level (r = .688, sig. = .00). Second, the correlation between academic self-efficacy level and the students’ speaking performance level was a significant moderate positive correlation (r =.
691, sig. = .00). Third, the relationship between achievement motivation combined with academic self-efficacy and the students’ speaking performance was statistically a significant high positive correlation since The result was significant (r= 0.737, sig. = .00). It was concluded that the teachers should be closer to the students in order to build more academic self-efficacy beliefs of the students. Teachers are expected to encourage the students to be more open and share their difficulties in learning especially in the speaking class. Thus, by having close communication between teachers and the students, it is expected that the students’ problems during the learning process can be solved. The students’ achievement motivation and the students’ academic self-efficacy are expected to be higher and stronger in completing the course with high achievement.

Save to Mendeley


Full Text:

PDF


DOI: https://doi.org/10.33508/mgs.v1i45.2043
PUBLISHER
Faculty of Teacher Education
Jl. Kalijudan 37, Surabaya 60114
Email: magister-scientiae@ukwms.ac.id

Magister Scientiae is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License

ISSN: 2622-7959

Hosted by Mason Publishing, part of the George Mason University Libraries.