Self-Efficacy
Capability beliefs influence capability itself.
Shrink Definition
Self-efficacy is the belief that one can successfully organize and execute the actions necessary to accomplish a specific task or navigate a particular challenge. Self-efficacy isn't confidence in general. It's confidence about performing a particular behavior under particular circumstances.
Plain language
Believing you can influence an outcome changes how you approach it.
Shrink Insight
People often attempt what they believe they can accomplish.
Why it matters
Self-efficacy influences: • persistence • resilience • learning • leadership • health behaviors • recovery • performance Higher self-efficacy is consistently associated with greater effort, persistence, and adaptive coping.
Common misunderstanding
Self-efficacy isn't believing success is guaranteed. It's believing you can continue adapting if difficulties arise.
Shrink Perspective
Confidence usually follows competence, not the reverse.
Shrink Reflection
What challenge have you avoided because you underestimated your ability to learn?
Shrink Journal
List three things you once believed you couldn't do but now perform routinely.
Shrink Step
Choose one task slightly beyond your current comfort zone.
Shrink Minute
Capability grows through repeated attempts.
Shrink Takeaway
Confidence compounds through action.
Medical boundary
This concept is educational and shouldn't be used to self-diagnose. It doesn't replace care from a licensed clinician. Symptoms, medication, and treatment decisions should be discussed with a qualified professional, and emergency symptoms require emergency care.
Evidence summary
Self-efficacy, introduced by Albert Bandura, is among the most extensively researched constructs in psychology and has consistently predicted persistence, learning, health behaviors, and performance.
Sources
Bandura (self-efficacy); American Psychological Association (APA); Peer-reviewed scientific literature
Reference status: landmark attributed