2004
DOI: 10.1080/00050060410001660371
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The validation of a scale to measure school principals' attitudes toward the inclusion of students with disabilities in regular schools

Abstract: This paper describes the validation of a 30‐item affective instrument designed initially to measure the attitudes of school principals in government schools in Queensland toward the inclusion of students with disabilities in regular schools. The original response pool consisted of 644 returns. The data validation demonstrated that this was a reliable and valid scale. Subsequent factor analyses yielded a six‐factor solution. An examination of the item metrics and an interpretation of the factor items resulted i… Show more

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Cited by 42 publications
(37 citation statements)
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“…A ready-made questionnaire was used as a measuring instrument. The attitude measurement instrument used in the survey was "School Principals' Attitudes toward Inclusion (SPATI)" (Bailey, 2004).…”
Section: Measuring Instrumentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A ready-made questionnaire was used as a measuring instrument. The attitude measurement instrument used in the survey was "School Principals' Attitudes toward Inclusion (SPATI)" (Bailey, 2004).…”
Section: Measuring Instrumentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although some empirical work has addressed the views of principals (Angelides, 2012;Avissar et al, 2003;Bailey, 2004;Bailey & du Plessis, 1998;Barnett & Monda-Amaya, 1998;Center et al, 1985;Cook et al, 1999;Graham & Spandagou, 2011;Praisner, 2003), they have not experienced the same level of attention as other groups of educators. This focus on teachers has benefits by directing attention to where inclusion happens -in classrooms.…”
mentioning
confidence: 96%
“…A significant body of research currently exists that highlights the views held by teachers on the assumption that the success of inclusion is dependent on teachers holding positive views (Avramidis & Norwich, 2002;Subban & Sharma, 2006). With this same principle in mind, attitudes of a full range of education professionals have also been explored, including preservice teachers (Avramidis et al, 2000a;Spandagou, Evans, & Little, 2008), school counsellors or psychologists (Center & Ward, 1989;Roberts & Smith, 1999), special education teachers (Cook, Semmel, & Gerber, 1999), students (Bunch & Valeo, 2004) and school principals (Bailey, 2004;Barnett & Monda-Amaya, 1998;Center, Ward, Parmenter, & Nash, 1985;Graham & Spandagou, 2011;Praisner, 2003). Common among many of these studies is the finding that the views of educators vary depending on the type and severity of the disability, with less positive attitudes held towards students with more severe disabilities and students with emotional and behavioural disabilities.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The first part consisted of the School Principals' Attitudes Toward Inclusion (SPA TI) scale, which is a 30-item, 5-point Likert inventory that ranged from strongly disagree to strongly agree. The reliability coefficient for the inventory was reported by Bailey (2004) at .92 with 639 respondents. The second part asked for demographic information from each principal.…”
Section: Administratorsmentioning
confidence: 99%