Academia Open
Vol. 11 No. 1 (2026): June

The Moderating Role of Self-Efficacy in the Influence of Participative Leadership Style and Teachers’ Professional Ethics on Students’ Learning Engagement: Peran Efikasi Diri dalam Memoderasi Pengaruh Gaya Kepemimpinan Partisipatif dan Etika Profesional Guru terhadap Keterlibatan Belajar Siswa

Anggreani, Bunga (Unknown)
Widhiastuti, Ratieh (Unknown)



Article Info

Publish Date
07 May 2026

Abstract

General Background: Student learning engagement is a central factor in educational success because it reflects students’ behavioral, emotional, and cognitive participation in academic activities. Specific Background: This study examined participative leadership style, teachers’ professional ethics, and self-efficacy within the framework of Social Cognitive Theory to explain student learning engagement. Knowledge Gap: Previous studies have commonly examined leadership, teacher professionalism, self-efficacy, and student engagement separately or through direct relationships, while integrated moderation models remain limited. Aims: This study aimed to analyze participative leadership style and teachers’ professional ethics in relation to student learning engagement, with self-efficacy as a moderating variable. Results: Using a quantitative survey design and Partial Least Squares analysis assisted by SmartPLS 4, the findings showed that participative leadership style had a positive and significant relationship with student learning engagement, while teachers’ professional ethics did not show a significant relationship. Self-efficacy had a direct positive relationship with student learning engagement but did not moderate the relationships between participative leadership style, teachers’ professional ethics, and student learning engagement. Novelty: The novelty lies in the simultaneous examination of participative leadership style, teachers’ professional ethics, and self-efficacy in one moderation model, showing that self-efficacy does not strengthen external factors in explaining student engagement. Implications: The findings indicate that student engagement is shaped more by active classroom participation and students’ self-belief, supporting the use of collaborative discussions, problem-based learning, and constructive feedback in learning activities. Highlights • Participative classroom leadership shows a significant positive relationship with student engagement.• Teachers’ professional ethics does not show a significant relationship in the tested model.• Self-efficacy contributes directly but does not act as a moderating variable. Keywords Participative Leadership; Self Efficacy; Student Engagement; Professional Ethics; Social Cognitive Theory

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Journal Info

Abbrev

acopen

Publisher

Subject

Medicine & Pharmacology Public Health

Description

Academia Open is published by Universitas Muhammadiyah Sidoarjo published 2 (two) issues per year (June and December). This journal provides immediate open access to its content on the principle that making research freely available to the public supports a greater global exchange of knowledge. This ...