Measuring School Climate: Invariance across Middle and High School Students

IF 1.2 Q3 SOCIAL WORK Children & Schools Pub Date : 2020-01-07 DOI:10.1093/cs/cdz026
T. Waasdorp, S. L. Johnson, K. Shukla, Catherine P. Bradshaw
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引用次数: 14

Abstract

Positive school climate has been consistently associated with many desirable student outcomes in both middle and high schools. However, there has been little work comparing the perceptions across these two school settings. The U.S. Department of Education conceptualized a three-factor model for school climate consisting of safety, engagement, and environment. Drawing on data from 29,720 middle and 34,950 high school students, the fit of the three-factor model was examined for measurement invariance, to explore whether the measure functioned similarly across both middle and high schools. The results indicated measurement invariance, which suggests that practitioners and researchers can confidently compare findings across middle and high schools to inform local decision making related to school-based programming. A series of multilevel analyses also explored the extent to which perceptions of school climate differed for middle and high school students; these results generally indicated that middle school students perceived the school more favorably than high school students. Implications of these findings for social workers are considered.
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测量学校气氛:初高中学生的不变性
在初中和高中,积极的学校氛围一直与许多理想的学生成绩有关。然而,很少有研究对这两所学校的认知进行比较。美国教育部概念化了一个学校气候的三因素模型,包括安全、参与和环境。利用来自29,720名初中生和34,950名高中生的数据,对三因素模型的拟合进行了测量不变性检验,以探索该测量在初中生和高中生中是否具有相似的功能。结果表明测量不变性,这表明从业者和研究人员可以自信地比较初中和高中的研究结果,为当地与校本规划相关的决策提供信息。一系列的多层次分析还探讨了初中生和高中生对学校气候的感知差异的程度;这些结果普遍表明初中生对学校的好感度高于高中生。本文考虑了这些发现对社会工作者的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Children & Schools
Children & Schools SOCIAL WORK-
CiteScore
3.50
自引率
10.00%
发文量
18
期刊介绍: Children & Schools publishes professional materials relevant to social work services for children. The journal publishes articles on innovations in practice, interdisciplinary efforts, research, program evaluation, policy, and planning. Topics include student-authority relationships, multiculturalism, early intervention, needs assessment, violence, and ADHD. Children & Schools is a practitioner-to-practitioner resource.
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