Construct Validity of Maryland Safe and Supportive Schools Climate Survey in Iran: A Validation Study

<strong>Background:</strong> The lack of a comprehensive instrument to measure school climate with good psychometric properties in Iran is strongly felt. This study aimed to examine the construct validity of the multidimensional structure of the Maryland Safe and Supportive Schools Clima...

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Main Authors: Maysam Rezapour, Narges Khanjani, Moghaddameh Mirzaee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Shiraz University of Medical Sciences 2020-04-01
Series:International Journal of School Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://intjsh.sums.ac.ir/article_46437_7007d13c1a05ddbea233df85b7c9b24e.pdf
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spelling doaj-ec946dcfcf624b7ea00cc6b3685935112020-11-25T03:26:26ZengShiraz University of Medical SciencesInternational Journal of School Health2345-51522383-12192020-04-017211310.30476/intjsh.2020.84914.104946437Construct Validity of Maryland Safe and Supportive Schools Climate Survey in Iran: A Validation StudyMaysam Rezapour0Narges Khanjani1Moghaddameh Mirzaee2Assistant Professor, School of Nursing and Midwifery Amol, Mazandaran University of Medical Sciences, Sari, Iran|Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences Research Center, Addiction Institute, Mazandaran University of Medical SciencesProfessor, Neurology Research Center, Kerman University of Medical Sciences, Kerman, IranAssociate Professor, Modeling in Health Research Center, Institute for Futures Studies in Health, Kerman University of Medical Sciences, Kerman, Iran<strong>Background:</strong> The lack of a comprehensive instrument to measure school climate with good psychometric properties in Iran is strongly felt. This study aimed to examine the construct validity of the multidimensional structure of the Maryland Safe and Supportive Schools Climate Survey (MDS3) among Iranian pupils.<br /> <strong>Methods:</strong> This validation study was peformed on a sample of 1540 pupils from 42 schools in Mazandran province in 2017. Confirmatory factor analyses (CFA) and exploratory structural equation modeling (ESEM) were employed to evaluate the construct validity of each of the three scales of the questionnaire (Safety, Engagement, and Environment). The current study tested measurement invariance across gender, school type, and grade levels.<br /> <strong>Results:</strong> Our findings confirmed the factor structures and measurement invariance across gender, school types, and grade levels regarding Safety, Engagement, and Environment scales of the Persian version of the MDS3 Climate Survey. This study revealed a conceptual overlap between the dimensions of school climate which can be well shown by ESEM (CFI=0.975, TLI=0.945, RMSEA=0.053, SRMR=0.029 for Safety scale; CFI=0.987, TLI=0.961, RMSEA=0.027, SRMR=0.018 regarding Engagement scale; CFI=0.960, TLI=0.926, RMSEA=0.036, SRMR=0.025 concerning Environment scale). Furthermore, the Pearson correlations of all school climate sub-scales were significant (P<0.05) with the exception of correlations between disorder subscale and connection to teachers (r=0.03, P=0.239), academic engagement (r=0.04, P=0.116), and culture of equity (r=0.02, P=0.432).<br /> <strong>Conclusion:</strong> The Persian version of MDS3 Climate Survey can be used to measure the three key domains of school climate (Safety, Engagement, and Environment) in Iranian context and the epidemiological studies associated with student health and behaviors.http://intjsh.sums.ac.ir/article_46437_7007d13c1a05ddbea233df85b7c9b24e.pdfaggression, environmentfactor analysissafetyiran
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maysam Rezapour
Narges Khanjani
Moghaddameh Mirzaee
spellingShingle Maysam Rezapour
Narges Khanjani
Moghaddameh Mirzaee
Construct Validity of Maryland Safe and Supportive Schools Climate Survey in Iran: A Validation Study
International Journal of School Health
aggression, environment
factor analysis
safety
iran
author_facet Maysam Rezapour
Narges Khanjani
Moghaddameh Mirzaee
author_sort Maysam Rezapour
title Construct Validity of Maryland Safe and Supportive Schools Climate Survey in Iran: A Validation Study
title_short Construct Validity of Maryland Safe and Supportive Schools Climate Survey in Iran: A Validation Study
title_full Construct Validity of Maryland Safe and Supportive Schools Climate Survey in Iran: A Validation Study
title_fullStr Construct Validity of Maryland Safe and Supportive Schools Climate Survey in Iran: A Validation Study
title_full_unstemmed Construct Validity of Maryland Safe and Supportive Schools Climate Survey in Iran: A Validation Study
title_sort construct validity of maryland safe and supportive schools climate survey in iran: a validation study
publisher Shiraz University of Medical Sciences
series International Journal of School Health
issn 2345-5152
2383-1219
publishDate 2020-04-01
description <strong>Background:</strong> The lack of a comprehensive instrument to measure school climate with good psychometric properties in Iran is strongly felt. This study aimed to examine the construct validity of the multidimensional structure of the Maryland Safe and Supportive Schools Climate Survey (MDS3) among Iranian pupils.<br /> <strong>Methods:</strong> This validation study was peformed on a sample of 1540 pupils from 42 schools in Mazandran province in 2017. Confirmatory factor analyses (CFA) and exploratory structural equation modeling (ESEM) were employed to evaluate the construct validity of each of the three scales of the questionnaire (Safety, Engagement, and Environment). The current study tested measurement invariance across gender, school type, and grade levels.<br /> <strong>Results:</strong> Our findings confirmed the factor structures and measurement invariance across gender, school types, and grade levels regarding Safety, Engagement, and Environment scales of the Persian version of the MDS3 Climate Survey. This study revealed a conceptual overlap between the dimensions of school climate which can be well shown by ESEM (CFI=0.975, TLI=0.945, RMSEA=0.053, SRMR=0.029 for Safety scale; CFI=0.987, TLI=0.961, RMSEA=0.027, SRMR=0.018 regarding Engagement scale; CFI=0.960, TLI=0.926, RMSEA=0.036, SRMR=0.025 concerning Environment scale). Furthermore, the Pearson correlations of all school climate sub-scales were significant (P<0.05) with the exception of correlations between disorder subscale and connection to teachers (r=0.03, P=0.239), academic engagement (r=0.04, P=0.116), and culture of equity (r=0.02, P=0.432).<br /> <strong>Conclusion:</strong> The Persian version of MDS3 Climate Survey can be used to measure the three key domains of school climate (Safety, Engagement, and Environment) in Iranian context and the epidemiological studies associated with student health and behaviors.
topic aggression, environment
factor analysis
safety
iran
url http://intjsh.sums.ac.ir/article_46437_7007d13c1a05ddbea233df85b7c9b24e.pdf
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AT moghaddamehmirzaee constructvalidityofmarylandsafeandsupportiveschoolsclimatesurveyiniranavalidationstudy
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