Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
354024 Early Childhood Research Quarterly 2013 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

Little is known about preschool teachers’ attitudes and beliefs toward science teaching, in part, because the field lacks valid and reliable measures of these teacher-related factors. To address this need, the current study developed and validated a rating scale (P-TABS) using a statewide sample of Head Start teachers (N = 507). A series of exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses were conducted. Generalizability and invariance of the final factor solution was examined across important subgroups of the standardization sample (i.e., teacher ethnicity, education level, and years of teaching experience). Three distinct factors were identified (Teacher Comfort, Child Benefit, and Challenges), with strong evidence for validity found for the first two factors. The P-TABS expands the availability of reliable and valid assessment tools for measuring preschool teachers’ attitudes and beliefs toward science teaching and for examining how these teacher-related factors affect classroom practices and student outcomes.

► Developed questionnaire of preschool teacher attitudes and beliefs toward science teaching. ► Identified two valid and reliable factors: “teacher comfort” and “benefit for children”. ► Preliminary evidence for questionnaire's concurrent validity was substantiated. ► Factors demonstrated adequate internal consistency; invariance across subgroups.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Applied Psychology
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