Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
353880 Early Childhood Research Quarterly 2013 16 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Examined invariance in the four key skills and total communication growth trajectories of the Early Communication Indicator (ECI).•Invariance is an important step in development because a comparison between samples assumes that the measurements are factorially invariant.•Vocalizations, single and multiple words, and total communication trajectories all met strong factorial and structural invariance.•Gestures met only weak structural invariance likely due to updates in coding definitions and a website upgrade affecting one sample.

The Early Communication Indicator (ECI) is a measure for universal screening, intervention decision-making, progress monitoring for infants and toddlers needing higher levels of support, and program accountability. In the context of the ECI's long-term wide-scale use for these purposes, we examined the invariance of ECI measurement in two samples of the same Early Head Start (EHS) population differing in the years data were collected. Invariance or equivalence across samples is an important step in measurement validation because making inferences assumes that the measurements are factorially invariant. A number of time-covarying factors (e.g., assessors, children, etc.) can be hypothesized as threats to measurement invariance. Results of latent growth curve analyses indicated similarity in the functional forms (velocity and shape) of the ECIs four key skill trajectories between groups of children and ECI vocalizations, single, and multiple words trajectories met strong factorial and structural invariance. Gestures met only weak factorial invariance. ECI total communications, a weighted composite of the four scales, also met both strong factorial and structural invariance. With one exception, results indicated that the ECI produced comparable growth estimates over different conditions of programs, assessors, and children over time, strengthening the construct validity of the ECI. Implications are discussed.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Applied Psychology
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