Measuring citizenship competences: Assessment of measurement invariance

Highlights: • Standardised questionnaires are used to measure the outcomes of citizenship education. • A prerequisite for cross-group comparisons based on these questionnaires is an assessment of measurement invariance. • This study used data from 6035 students from 87 Dutch primary schools to...

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Main Authors: Lianne Hoek, Bonne Zijlstra, Anke Munniksma, Anne Bert Dijkstra
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Bielefeld University 2023-07-01
Series:Journal of Social Science Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.jsse.org/index.php/jsse/article/view/5837
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author Lianne Hoek
Bonne Zijlstra
Anke Munniksma
Anne Bert Dijkstra
author_facet Lianne Hoek
Bonne Zijlstra
Anke Munniksma
Anne Bert Dijkstra
author_sort Lianne Hoek
collection DOAJ
description Highlights: • Standardised questionnaires are used to measure the outcomes of citizenship education. • A prerequisite for cross-group comparisons based on these questionnaires is an assessment of measurement invariance. • This study used data from 6035 students from 87 Dutch primary schools to examine the measurement invariance of citizenship knowledge, attitude, and skill across sex, socioeconomic position and migration background. • The measurement invariance was sufficient in most cases. • Periodic assessment of measurement invariance in instruments measuring citizenship competences is important due to the dynamic nature of the construct. Purpose: Standardised questionnaires are used to measure the outcomes of citizenship education. These outcomes are often compared across groups to document different outcomes, for example, between boys and girls. A prerequisite for cross-group comparisons is an assessment of measurement invariance.  Methodology: This study used data from 6035 students from 87 Dutch primary schools to examine the measurement invariance of the Citizenship Competences Questionnaire (Ten Dam et al., 2011). Dutch schools use this questionnaire to gain insight into students’ citizenship knowledge, attitudes, and skills. Measurement invariance was assessed across sex, socioeconomic position, and migration background. Findings: Measurement invariance was sufficient in most cases, allowing for cross-group comparisons of associations between latent constructs and their indicators, and in some cases, for cross-group comparisons of the latent means. We conclude by emphasising that periodic assessment of measurement invariance in instruments measuring citizenship competences is important due to the dynamic nature of the construct.
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spelling doaj.art-164e41d203ee4c8090786f45fcfa90162023-07-31T06:23:38ZdeuBielefeld UniversityJournal of Social Science Education1618-52932023-07-0122210.11576/jsse-5837Measuring citizenship competences: Assessment of measurement invarianceLianne Hoek0Bonne ZijlstraAnke MunniksmaAnne Bert DijkstraUniversity of Amsterdam Highlights: • Standardised questionnaires are used to measure the outcomes of citizenship education. • A prerequisite for cross-group comparisons based on these questionnaires is an assessment of measurement invariance. • This study used data from 6035 students from 87 Dutch primary schools to examine the measurement invariance of citizenship knowledge, attitude, and skill across sex, socioeconomic position and migration background. • The measurement invariance was sufficient in most cases. • Periodic assessment of measurement invariance in instruments measuring citizenship competences is important due to the dynamic nature of the construct. Purpose: Standardised questionnaires are used to measure the outcomes of citizenship education. These outcomes are often compared across groups to document different outcomes, for example, between boys and girls. A prerequisite for cross-group comparisons is an assessment of measurement invariance.  Methodology: This study used data from 6035 students from 87 Dutch primary schools to examine the measurement invariance of the Citizenship Competences Questionnaire (Ten Dam et al., 2011). Dutch schools use this questionnaire to gain insight into students’ citizenship knowledge, attitudes, and skills. Measurement invariance was assessed across sex, socioeconomic position, and migration background. Findings: Measurement invariance was sufficient in most cases, allowing for cross-group comparisons of associations between latent constructs and their indicators, and in some cases, for cross-group comparisons of the latent means. We conclude by emphasising that periodic assessment of measurement invariance in instruments measuring citizenship competences is important due to the dynamic nature of the construct. https://www.jsse.org/index.php/jsse/article/view/5837measurement invariancemeasurement equivalencecitizenship educationsocial outcomescitizenship competences
spellingShingle Lianne Hoek
Bonne Zijlstra
Anke Munniksma
Anne Bert Dijkstra
Measuring citizenship competences: Assessment of measurement invariance
Journal of Social Science Education
measurement invariance
measurement equivalence
citizenship education
social outcomes
citizenship competences
title Measuring citizenship competences: Assessment of measurement invariance
title_full Measuring citizenship competences: Assessment of measurement invariance
title_fullStr Measuring citizenship competences: Assessment of measurement invariance
title_full_unstemmed Measuring citizenship competences: Assessment of measurement invariance
title_short Measuring citizenship competences: Assessment of measurement invariance
title_sort measuring citizenship competences assessment of measurement invariance
topic measurement invariance
measurement equivalence
citizenship education
social outcomes
citizenship competences
url https://www.jsse.org/index.php/jsse/article/view/5837
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AT bonnezijlstra measuringcitizenshipcompetencesassessmentofmeasurementinvariance
AT ankemunniksma measuringcitizenshipcompetencesassessmentofmeasurementinvariance
AT annebertdijkstra measuringcitizenshipcompetencesassessmentofmeasurementinvariance