Testing the invariance of a motivation model across seven cultural groups

Jinnat Ali, Dennis M. McInerney

    Research output: Chapter in Book / Conference PaperConference Paperpeer-review

    Abstract

    ![CDATA[Using confirmatory factor analysis this study examines the cross-cultural generalizability of the factor structure for the Inventory of School Motivation (ISM), an instrument based on Personal Investment theory. The instrument consists of eight different scales with 43 survey items (ranging from 3 to 7 items each) and each reflecting one of eight specific dimensions: task, effort, competition, social power, affiliation, social concern, praise, and token. The factor structure was invariant over large samples of responses by Anglo-Australian (n=2,616), Migrant Australian (n=1,265), Aboriginal Australian (n=906), Hong Kong Chinese (n=697), Navajo (n=1,776), Anglo-American (n=884) and African (n=819) cultural groups of high school students. The results of factorial invariance analysis indicated that the ISM has a stable and reliable factor structure among the 7 cultural groups. Findings also provide evidence that the ISM scales are applicable to students of different cultural backgrounds; meaningful cross-cultural comparisons should use the 43 items in educational settings.]]
    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationAARE 2005 International Education Research Conference: Creative Dissent: Constructive Solutions: Papers Collection, UWS Parramatta, November 27, 2005
    PublisherAARE
    Number of pages14
    Publication statusPublished - 2006
    EventAARE International Education Research Conference -
    Duration: 27 Nov 2005 → …

    Publication series

    Name
    ISSN (Print)1324-9320

    Conference

    ConferenceAARE International Education Research Conference
    Period27/11/05 → …

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