Abstract

Background. School is an integral component of the life of a child, and thus quality of school life is an important part of the overall quality of life experienced by a child. There are a few instruments available to measure the quality of school life but they are often not available in English, or they are not appropriate for use alongside other instruments in a survey of young children. The Quality of Life in School (QoLS) instrument is a short, self-report measure to assess elementary school students’ perception of their quality of school life in four domains. The instrument was developed in Israel and has been validated among Hebrew-speaking children. The aim of the current study was to evaluate the psychometric properties of the QoLS measure in Canadian elementary school children.Methods. A total of 629 children attending grades 4–6 were recruited in a population-based cross-sectional study. The QoLS measure was administered to participating children by trained research assistants. In addition, their socio-demographic details and academic data were also obtained. The psychometric testing included exploratory factor analysis and reliability estimation using internal consistency (Cronbach’s Alpha). Construct validity was investigated using the known groups comparisons for discriminative validity and via convergent validity.Results. A four-factor structure was generated explaining 39% of the total variance in the model. The results showed good internal consistency and acceptable floor and ceiling effects. Cronbach’s Alpha ranged from 0.75 to 0.93. Known groups comparisons showed that the QoLS measure discriminated well between subgroups on the basis of gender, grade, and academic achievement, thus providing evidence of construct validity. The convergent validity was also appropriate with all the four domains demonstrating moderate to strong correlations to each other and to the total QoLS score.Conclusions. QoLS appears to be a valid and reliable measure for quality of school life assessment in young Canadian children.

Highlights

  • Quality of life has been acknowledged as an important and relevant concept for people of all ages including school-aged children

  • About two-thirds of students resided in urban areas, 31% came from households with an annual household income ≤$60,000, and 26% of parents and caregivers had secondary school education or less

  • Eigenvalues, scree plot, and parallel analysis suggested the presence of four factors: Psychosocial (PS); Attitude towards school (AT); School environment (SE); and Teacher–student relationship (TS)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Quality of life has been acknowledged as an important and relevant concept for people of all ages including school-aged children. The Quality of Life in School (QoLS) instrument is a short, self-report measure to assess elementary school students’ perception of their quality of school life in four domains. The aim of the current study was to evaluate the psychometric properties of the QoLS measure in Canadian elementary school children. The QoLS measure was administered to participating children by trained research assistants Their socio-demographic details and academic data were obtained. Known groups comparisons showed that the QoLS measure discriminated well between subgroups on the basis of gender, grade, and academic achievement, providing evidence of construct validity. QoLS appears to be a valid and reliable measure for quality of school life assessment in young Canadian children

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call