Development and validation of a tool to assess the organizational consequences of occupational stress among secondary school teachers in Sri Lanka

Introduction: Literature revealed the lack of a comprehensive tool to assess organizational consequences of occupational stress (OCOS) among schoolteachers. Objectives: To develop and validate an instrument to measure the OCOS among secondary school teachers in Sinhala medium government schools (OC...

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Main Authors: Buddhini Denuwara, Nalika Gunawardena, Madhubhashinee Dayabandara, Dulani Samaranayake
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: College of Community Physicians of Sri Lanka 2023-12-01
Series:Journal of the College of Community Physicians
Subjects:
Online Access:https://account.jccpsl.sljol.info/index.php/sljo-j-jccpsl/article/view/8611
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author Buddhini Denuwara
Nalika Gunawardena
Madhubhashinee Dayabandara
Dulani Samaranayake
author_facet Buddhini Denuwara
Nalika Gunawardena
Madhubhashinee Dayabandara
Dulani Samaranayake
author_sort Buddhini Denuwara
collection DOAJ
description Introduction: Literature revealed the lack of a comprehensive tool to assess organizational consequences of occupational stress (OCOS) among schoolteachers. Objectives: To develop and validate an instrument to measure the OCOS among secondary school teachers in Sinhala medium government schools (OCOST-Sinhala) Methods: Triangulation of quantitative and qualitative methods was used to design and validate OCOST-Sinhala. Item generation was guided by a conceptual framework. Reducing the items was through an assessment of a panel of experts and by Principal Component Analysis (PCA). PCA was performed among 360 secondary teachers to assess the factor structure. Construct validity was assessed by Confirmatory Factor Analysis (CFA) and a multi-trait scaling analysis in a survey among 300 secondary teachers. Cronbach’ alpha and test re-test reliability were determined. Results: OCOST-Sinhala had 45 items in seven domains (self-efficacy, work engagement, motivation, job satisfaction, enthusiasm, workload & work performance). In PCA, 65.98% of the variance was explained. All the indices used to evaluate the fitness of the model, confirmed that the statistical fitness of the original seven factors model provide valid results. CFA and multi-trait scaling analysis confirmed the construct validity with reliability confirmed as good (Cronbach’s alpha 0.92; test re-test reliability >0.7). Conclusions & Recommendations: The developed OCOST-Sinhala was found to be a valid and reliable test to assess OCOS among secondary school teachers in Sri Lanka.
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spelling doaj.art-e95a7b08c59345f59dbd1f05e38cde5b2024-01-09T12:13:36ZengCollege of Community Physicians of Sri LankaJournal of the College of Community Physicians1391-31742579-14512023-12-0129410.4038/jccpsl.v29i4.8611281Development and validation of a tool to assess the organizational consequences of occupational stress among secondary school teachers in Sri LankaBuddhini Denuwara0Nalika Gunawardena1Madhubhashinee Dayabandara2Dulani Samaranayake3University of ColomboWHO Regional Office for South-East AsiaUniversity of ColomboUniversity of Colombo Introduction: Literature revealed the lack of a comprehensive tool to assess organizational consequences of occupational stress (OCOS) among schoolteachers. Objectives: To develop and validate an instrument to measure the OCOS among secondary school teachers in Sinhala medium government schools (OCOST-Sinhala) Methods: Triangulation of quantitative and qualitative methods was used to design and validate OCOST-Sinhala. Item generation was guided by a conceptual framework. Reducing the items was through an assessment of a panel of experts and by Principal Component Analysis (PCA). PCA was performed among 360 secondary teachers to assess the factor structure. Construct validity was assessed by Confirmatory Factor Analysis (CFA) and a multi-trait scaling analysis in a survey among 300 secondary teachers. Cronbach’ alpha and test re-test reliability were determined. Results: OCOST-Sinhala had 45 items in seven domains (self-efficacy, work engagement, motivation, job satisfaction, enthusiasm, workload & work performance). In PCA, 65.98% of the variance was explained. All the indices used to evaluate the fitness of the model, confirmed that the statistical fitness of the original seven factors model provide valid results. CFA and multi-trait scaling analysis confirmed the construct validity with reliability confirmed as good (Cronbach’s alpha 0.92; test re-test reliability >0.7). Conclusions & Recommendations: The developed OCOST-Sinhala was found to be a valid and reliable test to assess OCOS among secondary school teachers in Sri Lanka. https://account.jccpsl.sljol.info/index.php/sljo-j-jccpsl/article/view/8611OCOSTSinhalaOccupational stressOrganizational consequencesTeachers
spellingShingle Buddhini Denuwara
Nalika Gunawardena
Madhubhashinee Dayabandara
Dulani Samaranayake
Development and validation of a tool to assess the organizational consequences of occupational stress among secondary school teachers in Sri Lanka
Journal of the College of Community Physicians
OCOST
Sinhala
Occupational stress
Organizational consequences
Teachers
title Development and validation of a tool to assess the organizational consequences of occupational stress among secondary school teachers in Sri Lanka
title_full Development and validation of a tool to assess the organizational consequences of occupational stress among secondary school teachers in Sri Lanka
title_fullStr Development and validation of a tool to assess the organizational consequences of occupational stress among secondary school teachers in Sri Lanka
title_full_unstemmed Development and validation of a tool to assess the organizational consequences of occupational stress among secondary school teachers in Sri Lanka
title_short Development and validation of a tool to assess the organizational consequences of occupational stress among secondary school teachers in Sri Lanka
title_sort development and validation of a tool to assess the organizational consequences of occupational stress among secondary school teachers in sri lanka
topic OCOST
Sinhala
Occupational stress
Organizational consequences
Teachers
url https://account.jccpsl.sljol.info/index.php/sljo-j-jccpsl/article/view/8611
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