%0 Journal Article %T Going to College? Latina/Latino High School Students¡¯ College %A Karen M. O¡¯Brien %A Maria Luz Berbery %J Journal of Career Assessment %@ 1552-4590 %D 2018 %R 10.1177/1069072717695587 %X This study investigated the contributions of academic performance and college-going support and barriers in predicting college-going self-efficacy and educational goals among Latina/Latino high school students. Concerns regarding assessment and measurement issues in prior research were addressed. Findings suggested that grade point average was the most important contributor of both college-going self-efficacy and educational goals. In addition, college-going support from family moderated the relationship between grade point average and college-going self-efficacy, such that for students with a high grade point average, high levels of support were related to higher self-efficacy, while students with a high grade point average but lower support had lower self-efficacy. Levels of family support were less important with regard to efficacy and goals for students with a lower grade point average, who tended to have low college-going self-efficacy. The implications of these findings are discussed and recommendations for future research and practice are provided %K college self-efficacy %K educational goals %K Latina/Latino students %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/1069072717695587