Background & Context: As graduate programs in computing expand to online environments, existing research is limited in its ability to inform both practical and theoretical understandings of the factors influencing student success.

Objective: We explore student perceptions of their learning environment at the understudied intersection of online graduate education, STEM, and adult learning. We focus on how students’ human capital influences self-efficacy and how self-efficacy shapes perceptions of the learning environment.

Method: We conduct a survey of students in a large, online MS program in computer science, then examine those findings using descriptive statistics and OLS.

Findings: Findings indicate gender variation in both learning and computing self-efficacy and in how positively students perceive the online learning environment. Students with prior online education experiences have lower learning self-efficacy.

Implications: Low learning self-efficacy is one potential mechanism for why online students struggle to succeed, even in specialized fields. Adapting support structures, advising, and admissions may help address these challenges.