Evolving Self-Regulation and Self-Efficacy in Academic Writing: Sojourning Narratives of EFL Doctoral Students

Although there is a plethora of literature studies on self-regulation, self-efficacy, and academic writing, the detailed investigation of these three aspects in EFL doctoral students is scant. This study examined doctoral students’ self-regulation and self-efficacy in academic writing as potentially...

詳細記述

書誌詳細
出版年:Studies in English Language and Education
第一著者: 2-s2.0-85219711720
フォーマット: 論文
言語:English
出版事項: Syiah Kuala University 2025
オンライン・アクセス:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85219711720&doi=10.24815%2fsiele.v12i1.41180&partnerID=40&md5=a200fd7ce100dd156a3fbb4a8dd89041
id Jonathans P.M.; Cahyono B.Y.; Kweldju S.; Ratri D.P.; Astutik I.; Sharif T.I.S.T.
spelling Jonathans P.M.; Cahyono B.Y.; Kweldju S.; Ratri D.P.; Astutik I.; Sharif T.I.S.T.
2-s2.0-85219711720
Evolving Self-Regulation and Self-Efficacy in Academic Writing: Sojourning Narratives of EFL Doctoral Students
2025
Studies in English Language and Education
12
1
10.24815/siele.v12i1.41180
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85219711720&doi=10.24815%2fsiele.v12i1.41180&partnerID=40&md5=a200fd7ce100dd156a3fbb4a8dd89041
Although there is a plethora of literature studies on self-regulation, self-efficacy, and academic writing, the detailed investigation of these three aspects in EFL doctoral students is scant. This study examined doctoral students’ self-regulation and self-efficacy in academic writing as potentially profound outcomes of their sojourning. Data were collected from narrative frames, narrative interviews, and Focus Group Discussions to explain all related dimensions of the successive EFL academic writings of eight doctoral students studying abroad. The thematic analysis of the data revealed that the participants gradually developed a perception of self-regulation and self-efficacy in academic writing processes during their sojourning. Five self-regulation writing strategies were identified as contributing to the success of advanced academic writing: cognitive, metacognitive, social-behavioral, motivational regulation, and socio-cognitive strategies. These strategies were essential for doctoral students’ preparation programs to maximize writing productivity. The students’ academic writing self-efficacy developed through writing strategies, peer interactions, academic atmosphere, academic English exposure, research skills, study engagement, and social life as doctoral students. The contributing factors influencing the students’ writing achievement included their writing behaviors, writing efficacy, academic writing use, and sojourning experiences. These experiences covered writing traditions in the scholarly community, graduate school programs, the English-speaking context, discourse, the supervisor–doctoral student relationship, international academic communication, and other writing accomplishments. The findings imply a reciprocal relationship between their perceived writing self-efficacy and their progressive self-regulation in writing. © 2025 by Authors, published by Studies in English Language and Education.
Syiah Kuala University
23552794
English
Article
All Open Access; Gold Open Access
author 2-s2.0-85219711720
spellingShingle 2-s2.0-85219711720
Evolving Self-Regulation and Self-Efficacy in Academic Writing: Sojourning Narratives of EFL Doctoral Students
author_facet 2-s2.0-85219711720
author_sort 2-s2.0-85219711720
title Evolving Self-Regulation and Self-Efficacy in Academic Writing: Sojourning Narratives of EFL Doctoral Students
title_short Evolving Self-Regulation and Self-Efficacy in Academic Writing: Sojourning Narratives of EFL Doctoral Students
title_full Evolving Self-Regulation and Self-Efficacy in Academic Writing: Sojourning Narratives of EFL Doctoral Students
title_fullStr Evolving Self-Regulation and Self-Efficacy in Academic Writing: Sojourning Narratives of EFL Doctoral Students
title_full_unstemmed Evolving Self-Regulation and Self-Efficacy in Academic Writing: Sojourning Narratives of EFL Doctoral Students
title_sort Evolving Self-Regulation and Self-Efficacy in Academic Writing: Sojourning Narratives of EFL Doctoral Students
publishDate 2025
container_title Studies in English Language and Education
container_volume 12
container_issue 1
doi_str_mv 10.24815/siele.v12i1.41180
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85219711720&doi=10.24815%2fsiele.v12i1.41180&partnerID=40&md5=a200fd7ce100dd156a3fbb4a8dd89041
description Although there is a plethora of literature studies on self-regulation, self-efficacy, and academic writing, the detailed investigation of these three aspects in EFL doctoral students is scant. This study examined doctoral students’ self-regulation and self-efficacy in academic writing as potentially profound outcomes of their sojourning. Data were collected from narrative frames, narrative interviews, and Focus Group Discussions to explain all related dimensions of the successive EFL academic writings of eight doctoral students studying abroad. The thematic analysis of the data revealed that the participants gradually developed a perception of self-regulation and self-efficacy in academic writing processes during their sojourning. Five self-regulation writing strategies were identified as contributing to the success of advanced academic writing: cognitive, metacognitive, social-behavioral, motivational regulation, and socio-cognitive strategies. These strategies were essential for doctoral students’ preparation programs to maximize writing productivity. The students’ academic writing self-efficacy developed through writing strategies, peer interactions, academic atmosphere, academic English exposure, research skills, study engagement, and social life as doctoral students. The contributing factors influencing the students’ writing achievement included their writing behaviors, writing efficacy, academic writing use, and sojourning experiences. These experiences covered writing traditions in the scholarly community, graduate school programs, the English-speaking context, discourse, the supervisor–doctoral student relationship, international academic communication, and other writing accomplishments. The findings imply a reciprocal relationship between their perceived writing self-efficacy and their progressive self-regulation in writing. © 2025 by Authors, published by Studies in English Language and Education.
publisher Syiah Kuala University
issn 23552794
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Gold Open Access
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