2013
DOI: 10.1037/a0032773
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Why item parcels are (almost) never appropriate: Two wrongs do not make a right—Camouflaging misspecification with item parcels in CFA models.

Abstract: The present investigation has a dual focus: to evaluate problematic practice in the use of item parcels and to suggest exploratory structural equation models (ESEMs) as a viable alternative to the traditional independent clusters confirmatory factor analysis (ICM-CFA) model (with no cross-loadings, subsidiary factors, or correlated uniquenesses). Typically, it is ill-advised to (a) use item parcels when ICM-CFA models do not fit the data, and (b) retain ICM-CFA models when items cross-load on multiple factors.… Show more

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Cited by 339 publications
(343 citation statements)
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References 86 publications
(234 reference statements)
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“…Cole & Maxwell, 2003). To measure the latent factors, we used item parcels as indicators because parcels produce more reliable latent variables than individual items (Little, Cunningham, Shahar, & Widaman, 2002; but see Marsh, Lüdtke, Nagengast, Morin, & Von Davier, 2013). For each latent factor, we aggregated the items into three parcels.…”
Section: Study-level Analysesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Cole & Maxwell, 2003). To measure the latent factors, we used item parcels as indicators because parcels produce more reliable latent variables than individual items (Little, Cunningham, Shahar, & Widaman, 2002; but see Marsh, Lüdtke, Nagengast, Morin, & Von Davier, 2013). For each latent factor, we aggregated the items into three parcels.…”
Section: Study-level Analysesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…ESEM offers the possibility to integrate features of CFA, structural equation modeling (SEM), and exploratory factor analysis (EFA) in a single framework. This decision is based on the results from simulation studies Sass & Schmitt, 2010;Schmitt & Sass, 2011) and studies of simulated data (Marsh, Lüdtke, Nagengast, Morin, & Von Davier, 2013;Morin, Arens, & Marsh, 2015) showing that forcing cross loadings (even as small as .100, Marsh et al, 2013) present in the population model to be exactly zero according to typical CFA specification forces these cross loadings to be expressed through an inflation of the factor correlations. In contrast, these same studies show that the free estimation of cross-loadings, even when none are present in the population model, still provides unbiased estimates of the factor correlations (also see Asparouhov, Muthén, & Morin, 2015;.…”
Section: Preliminary Measurement Models and Tests Of Measurement Invamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Given that the use of item parcels is not unequivocally supported in the methodological literature (for the debate, see, e.g., Little et al, 2013;Marsh, Lüdtke, Nagengast, Morin, & Von Davier, 2013), we also tested for measurement invariance on the item level. We accounted for the Likert-type response scale of the RSE by using item factor analysis with categorical indicators (Wirth & Edwards, 2007).…”
Section: Measurement Invariance Of Self-esteemmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Models 5 and 6 tested weak and strong invariance across cohorts by progressively constraining the loadings and intercepts of indicators. As indicated by the test of small difference in fit, the constraints did not significantly worsen model fit, suggesting strong measurement invariance across birth cohorts.Given that the use of item parcels is not unequivocally supported in the methodological literature (for the debate, see, e.g., Little et al, 2013;Marsh, Lüdtke, Nagengast, Morin, & Von Davier, 2013), we also tested for measurement invariance on the item level. We accounted for the Likert-type response scale of the RSE by using item factor analysis with categorical indicators (Wirth & Edwards, 2007).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%