scholarly journals The Psychometric Properties of School Belonging Scale for Middle School Students

Author(s):  
Bekir DIREKCI ◽  
Mehmet CANBULAT ◽  
Ibrahim TEZCİ ◽  
Serdar AKBULUT
2013 ◽  
Vol 38 (8) ◽  
pp. 2378-2383 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kentya H. Ford ◽  
Abiola O. Oladapo ◽  
Kymberle L. Sterling ◽  
Pamela M. Diamond ◽  
Steven H. Kelder ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jaymes Pyne ◽  
Eric Grodsky

We investigate how teachers’ mindsets—or their beliefs about learning and school—relate to adolescents’ individual and collective reports of classroom belonging. Our pre-registered analyses of 1,200 middle school students show that teachers’ growth mindset and confidence in teaching positively relate to students’ math class belonging—explaining 40 percent of belonging among classes. Yet a teacher’s own sense of school belonging is unrelated to the belonging students feel in class. We also find that the conditional association between math teaching confidence and students’ classroom belonging is twice as strong for Black adolescents as it is for their White peers, and a teacher’s growth mindset has no bearing on Asian adolescents’ math class belonging.


2011 ◽  
Vol 37 (3) ◽  
pp. 131-146 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tammy D. Tolar ◽  
Amy E. Barth ◽  
David J. Francis ◽  
Jack M. Fletcher ◽  
Karla K. Stuebing ◽  
...  

Maze tasks have appealing properties as progress-monitoring tools, but there is a need for a thorough examination of the psychometric properties of Maze tasks among middle school students. We evaluated form effects, reliability, validity, and practice effects of Maze among students in Grades 6 through 8. We administered the same (familiar) and novel Maze passages for progress monitoring of a reading intervention among typical readers ( n = 588), struggling readers receiving researcher-provided intervention ( n = 471), and struggling readers not receiving intervention ( n = 284). Form effects accounted for significant variance in Maze performance. Familiar passages had greater test–retest reliability than novel passages. Both administrative conditions had similar, moderate correlations (validity coefficients) with other measures of reading fluency and comprehension. There were also significant practice effects. Students who read the same passage showed steeper slopes in Maze performance than students who read different passages over time. Practice effects were influenced by beginning levels of reading comprehension and by intervention status.


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