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Open AccessArticle
Students’ Self-Efficacy in General ICT Use as a Mediator Between Computer Experience, Learning ICT at School, ICT Use in Class, and Computer and Information Literacy
by
Plamen Vladkov Mirazchiyski
Plamen Vladkov Mirazchiyski
Plamen Mirazchiyski holds a Master and PhD degrees in Social Pedagogy. Plamen has been employed at R [...]
Plamen Mirazchiyski holds a Master and PhD degrees in Social Pedagogy. Plamen has been employed at the International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement – Data Processing and Research Centre (IEA-DPC) in Hamburg (Germany) for more than eight years, where he was the Deputy Head of the Research and Analysis Unit for three years. Currently, he is employed as Higher Research Fellow at the Educational Research Institute (Slovenia). He is also an Assistant Professor in Research Methodology at the Euro-Mediterranean University (EMUNI), Slovenia. Plamen is the author of the R Analyzer for Large-Scale Assessments (RALSA) R package for analyzing data from educational studies with complex sampling and assessment design. His research topics mainly include: ICT in education, reading literacy, mathematics and science education, civic and citizenship education, methodology of large-scale assessments and psychometrics.
Educational Research Institute, SI-1000 Ljubljana, Slovenia
Educ. Sci. 2025, 15(8), 1081; https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15081081 (registering DOI)
Submission received: 20 June 2025
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Revised: 13 August 2025
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Accepted: 19 August 2025
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Published: 21 August 2025
Abstract
Self-efficacy is related to a specific domain and is a result of capabilities and beliefs of one’s own performance in a specific domain given a specific task, depending on the levels of anxiety, motivation, feeling of success, and positive and negative rewards. Computer experience, the learning of information and communication technology tasks at school, and the use of general applications in class are known to be related to computer and information literacy. This study investigates the mediation effect of student computer self-efficacy in using general applications in these relationships using a structural equation model. The data used in this study stems from nine European educational systems participating in the International Computer and Information Literacy Study in 2018. The results show that in nearly all educational systems, the self-efficacy regarding the use of general applications has significant mediation effects in the relationship between computer and information literacy and each of the three information and communication technology variables in the model. The mediation effects are strongest for general applications in class and weakest for learning of information and communication technology tasks at school. The results are discussed against the educational systems’ context with recommendations for improving student computer self-efficacy.
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MDPI and ACS Style
Mirazchiyski, P.V.
Students’ Self-Efficacy in General ICT Use as a Mediator Between Computer Experience, Learning ICT at School, ICT Use in Class, and Computer and Information Literacy. Educ. Sci. 2025, 15, 1081.
https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15081081
AMA Style
Mirazchiyski PV.
Students’ Self-Efficacy in General ICT Use as a Mediator Between Computer Experience, Learning ICT at School, ICT Use in Class, and Computer and Information Literacy. Education Sciences. 2025; 15(8):1081.
https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15081081
Chicago/Turabian Style
Mirazchiyski, Plamen Vladkov.
2025. "Students’ Self-Efficacy in General ICT Use as a Mediator Between Computer Experience, Learning ICT at School, ICT Use in Class, and Computer and Information Literacy" Education Sciences 15, no. 8: 1081.
https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15081081
APA Style
Mirazchiyski, P. V.
(2025). Students’ Self-Efficacy in General ICT Use as a Mediator Between Computer Experience, Learning ICT at School, ICT Use in Class, and Computer and Information Literacy. Education Sciences, 15(8), 1081.
https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15081081
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