The Relationship between Vocational Identity and the Enhancement of Vocational Education Quality: A Case Study Based on Social Cognitive Theory
Published 2025-03-05
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Abstract
Abstract: This paper explores the relationship between vocational identity and the
quality of vocational education through a case study approach, grounded in Social
Cognitive Theory. Taking Li Hao (a pseudonym), a mechanical engineering student at
a vocational and technical college, as an example, the study employs in-depth
interviews, participatory observation, and text analysis to reveal the developmental
process of vocational identity and its impact on the quality of vocational education.
The study finds that the formation of vocational identity is a dynamic process
influenced by both external environments and personal experiences. High-quality
vocational education significantly enhances students' vocational identity through
practice-oriented curriculum design, school-enterprise cooperation, teacher support,
and other factors. Self-efficacy, role modeling, and outcome expectations, key
constructs in Social Cognitive Theory, are prominently manifested in vocational
education. The study suggests optimizing practical teaching, deepening
school-enterprise cooperation, enhancing teachers' competencies, and emphasizing the
integration of theory and practice to strengthen the quality of vocational education and
students' vocational identity.