Social withdrawal has been reported as a major factor responsible for students’ inactive participation in the school social activities. Research suggested that self-efficacy is capable of improving personal and social interpersonal relationship. This study was on the influence of self-efficacy on social withdrawal among secondary school adolescents in Ilorin, metropolis, Kwara State. Correlational research design of survey was used. The population was 92, 097 senior school adolescents in Kwara State from which 398 (230 male and 168 female) SSS Two adolescents were randomly selected from 15 public schools across the three were purposively selected Local Government Areas in Ilorin metropolis, Kwara State. Data was collected using Social Self-efficacy Scale (SSES) and Social Withdrawal Frequency Scale (SWFS). The reliability of the (SWFS) showed (0.83, 0.63 and 0.83), while (SSES) has reliability score of 0.72. Mean and Standard Deviation was used to answered the research questions and Analysis of Variance was used to test the hypothesis at 0.05 level of significance. Findings showed that there was low social withdrawal among adolescent students in Ilorin metropolis, Kwara State (M= 60.23; SD=5.06). The study also showed that there was high self-efficacy among the majority of the secondary school adolescent students in Ilorin metropolis, Kwara State (M=120.02, SD=5.44). It was found that there was a strong influence of self-efficacy and social withdrawal among secondary school adolescents in Ilorin metropolis, Kwara State (F. Cal. 103.73, df.397, p.>0.05). The study concluded that there was low social withdrawal behaviour among Secondary School Adolescents in Ilorin Metropolis. The study also concluded that there was high self-efficacy among Secondary School Adolescents in Ilorin Metropolis. The study concluded that there was a strong influence of self-efficacy on social withdrawal among Secondary School Adolescents in Ilorin Metropolis. Based on the conclusions, the study recommended that: the school counsellors should ensure that frequent counselling training for at least two times in a week.
Published in | International Journal of Psychological Science (Volume 5, Issue 3) |
DOI | 10.11648/j.ijps.20250503.11 |
Page(s) | 43-50 |
Creative Commons |
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited. |
Copyright |
Copyright © The Author(s), 2025. Published by Science Publishing Group |
Adolescents, Low Self-efficacy, High Self-efficacy, Moderate Self-efficacy, Self-efficacy, Social Withdrawal
N | Mean | Std. Deviation | |
---|---|---|---|
Low Social Withdrawal | 355 | 60.23 | 5.056 |
Moderate Social Withdrawal | 36 | 89.67 | 10.666 |
High Social Withdrawal | 7 | 122.86 | 5.956 |
Total | 398 |
N | Mean | Std. Deviation | |
---|---|---|---|
Low Self-Efficacy | 13 | 63.85 | 6.453 |
Moderate Self-Efficacy | 72 | 92.21 | 9.809 |
High Self-Efficacy | 313 | 120.02 | 5.441 |
Valid N (listwise) | 398 |
Social Withdrawal | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sum of Squares | Df | Mean Square | F | Sig. | |
Between Groups | 18.928 | 2 | 9.464 | 103.730 | .000 |
Within Groups | 36.039 | 395 | .091 | ||
Total | 54.967 | 397 |
Dependent Variable: SW | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Scheffe | ||||||
Self-efficacy | Self-efficacy | Mean Difference | Std. Error | Sig. | 95% Confidence Interval | |
Lower Bound | Upper Bound | |||||
Low Self-efficacy | Moderate Self-efficacy | .552* | .093 | .000 | .32 | .78 |
High Self-efficacy | .969* | .085 | .000 | .76 | 1.18 | |
Moderate Self-efficacy | Low Self-efficacy | -.552* | .093 | .000 | -.78 | -.32 |
High Self-efficacy | .418* | .043 | .000 | .31 | .52 | |
High Self-efficacy | Low Self-efficacy | -.969* | .085 | .000 | -1.18 | -.76 |
Moderate Self-efficacy | -.418* | .043 | .000 | -.52 | -.31 |
Scheffea,b | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Self-efficacy Types | N | Subset for alpha = 0.05 | ||
1 | 2 | 3 | ||
High Self-efficacy | 327 | 1.03 | ||
Moderate Self-efficacy | 58 | 1.45 | ||
Low Self-efficacy | 13 | 2.00 | ||
Sig. | 1.000 | 1.000 | 1.000 |
SE | Self-efficacy |
LSE | Low Self-efficacy |
MSE | Moderate Self-efficacy |
HSE | High Self-efficacy |
SSES | Social Self-efficacy Scale |
SW | Social Withdrawal |
LSW | Low Social Withdrawal |
MSW | Moderate Social Withdrawal |
HSW | High Social Withdrawal |
SWFS | Social Withdrawal Frequency Scale |
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APA Style
Hassan, A. T., Kamil, L. A., Akorede, Z. A. (2025). Influence of Self-Efficacy on Social Withdrawal Among Secondary School Adolescents in Ilorin Metropolis, Kwara State, Nigeria. International Journal of Psychological Science, 5(3), 43-50. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijps.20250503.11
ACS Style
Hassan, A. T.; Kamil, L. A.; Akorede, Z. A. Influence of Self-Efficacy on Social Withdrawal Among Secondary School Adolescents in Ilorin Metropolis, Kwara State, Nigeria. Int. J. Psychol. Sci. 2025, 5(3), 43-50. doi: 10.11648/j.ijps.20250503.11
@article{10.11648/j.ijps.20250503.11, author = {Ahmed Taiye Hassan and Lasisi Adekola Kamil and Zakariyah Abdul-Hameed Akorede}, title = {Influence of Self-Efficacy on Social Withdrawal Among Secondary School Adolescents in Ilorin Metropolis, Kwara State, Nigeria }, journal = {International Journal of Psychological Science}, volume = {5}, number = {3}, pages = {43-50}, doi = {10.11648/j.ijps.20250503.11}, url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijps.20250503.11}, eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.ijps.20250503.11}, abstract = {Social withdrawal has been reported as a major factor responsible for students’ inactive participation in the school social activities. Research suggested that self-efficacy is capable of improving personal and social interpersonal relationship. This study was on the influence of self-efficacy on social withdrawal among secondary school adolescents in Ilorin, metropolis, Kwara State. Correlational research design of survey was used. The population was 92, 097 senior school adolescents in Kwara State from which 398 (230 male and 168 female) SSS Two adolescents were randomly selected from 15 public schools across the three were purposively selected Local Government Areas in Ilorin metropolis, Kwara State. Data was collected using Social Self-efficacy Scale (SSES) and Social Withdrawal Frequency Scale (SWFS). The reliability of the (SWFS) showed (0.83, 0.63 and 0.83), while (SSES) has reliability score of 0.72. Mean and Standard Deviation was used to answered the research questions and Analysis of Variance was used to test the hypothesis at 0.05 level of significance. Findings showed that there was low social withdrawal among adolescent students in Ilorin metropolis, Kwara State (M= 60.23; SD=5.06). The study also showed that there was high self-efficacy among the majority of the secondary school adolescent students in Ilorin metropolis, Kwara State (M=120.02, SD=5.44). It was found that there was a strong influence of self-efficacy and social withdrawal among secondary school adolescents in Ilorin metropolis, Kwara State (F. Cal. 103.73, df.397, p.>0.05). The study concluded that there was low social withdrawal behaviour among Secondary School Adolescents in Ilorin Metropolis. The study also concluded that there was high self-efficacy among Secondary School Adolescents in Ilorin Metropolis. The study concluded that there was a strong influence of self-efficacy on social withdrawal among Secondary School Adolescents in Ilorin Metropolis. Based on the conclusions, the study recommended that: the school counsellors should ensure that frequent counselling training for at least two times in a week. }, year = {2025} }
TY - JOUR T1 - Influence of Self-Efficacy on Social Withdrawal Among Secondary School Adolescents in Ilorin Metropolis, Kwara State, Nigeria AU - Ahmed Taiye Hassan AU - Lasisi Adekola Kamil AU - Zakariyah Abdul-Hameed Akorede Y1 - 2025/09/02 PY - 2025 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijps.20250503.11 DO - 10.11648/j.ijps.20250503.11 T2 - International Journal of Psychological Science JF - International Journal of Psychological Science JO - International Journal of Psychological Science SP - 43 EP - 50 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2994-7162 UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijps.20250503.11 AB - Social withdrawal has been reported as a major factor responsible for students’ inactive participation in the school social activities. Research suggested that self-efficacy is capable of improving personal and social interpersonal relationship. This study was on the influence of self-efficacy on social withdrawal among secondary school adolescents in Ilorin, metropolis, Kwara State. Correlational research design of survey was used. The population was 92, 097 senior school adolescents in Kwara State from which 398 (230 male and 168 female) SSS Two adolescents were randomly selected from 15 public schools across the three were purposively selected Local Government Areas in Ilorin metropolis, Kwara State. Data was collected using Social Self-efficacy Scale (SSES) and Social Withdrawal Frequency Scale (SWFS). The reliability of the (SWFS) showed (0.83, 0.63 and 0.83), while (SSES) has reliability score of 0.72. Mean and Standard Deviation was used to answered the research questions and Analysis of Variance was used to test the hypothesis at 0.05 level of significance. Findings showed that there was low social withdrawal among adolescent students in Ilorin metropolis, Kwara State (M= 60.23; SD=5.06). The study also showed that there was high self-efficacy among the majority of the secondary school adolescent students in Ilorin metropolis, Kwara State (M=120.02, SD=5.44). It was found that there was a strong influence of self-efficacy and social withdrawal among secondary school adolescents in Ilorin metropolis, Kwara State (F. Cal. 103.73, df.397, p.>0.05). The study concluded that there was low social withdrawal behaviour among Secondary School Adolescents in Ilorin Metropolis. The study also concluded that there was high self-efficacy among Secondary School Adolescents in Ilorin Metropolis. The study concluded that there was a strong influence of self-efficacy on social withdrawal among Secondary School Adolescents in Ilorin Metropolis. Based on the conclusions, the study recommended that: the school counsellors should ensure that frequent counselling training for at least two times in a week. VL - 5 IS - 3 ER -