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Journal Article

Citation

Phillips SF, Rowley JF. Soc. Work Res. 2016; 40(1): 31-39.

Affiliation

is vice president of research and is research associate, Tripod Education Partners, Cambridge, MA. Address correspondence to Sarah Fierberg Phillips, Tripod Education Partners, 101 Main Street, 14th floor, Cambridge, MA 02142.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, Oxford University Press)

DOI

10.1093/swr/svv036

PMID

27257355

Abstract

Recently revised standards for social work practice in schools encourage data-informed school climate interventions that implicitly require invariant measures of school climate. Invariant measures have the same meaning, scale, and origin across different groups of respondents. Although noninvariant measures bias statistical analyses and can lead users to erroneous conclusions, most school climate measures have not been tested for invariance. This study examines the invariance of the Tripod School Climate Index. Exploratory, confirmatory, and multiple-group confirmatory factor analyses were conducted on data collected from 66,531 students across 222 schools.

RESULTS indicate that the index is an excellent fit for the data and invariant by student grade level, demographic background, prior achievement, and dropout risk.

RESULTS imply that student responses can be validly aggregated to create school-level scores. The index will not bias studies of school climate interventions or bivariate analyses comparing perceptions of school climate across subgroups of students attending the same school. Given the centrality of school climate interventions to social work practice in schools and the consequences of noninvariance, the development of an index with these properties is an important contribution to the field.


Language: en

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