| Literature DB >> 34014698 |
Tamika P La Salle1, Jesslynn Rocha-Neves2, Shane Jimerson3, Sergio Di Sano4, Baiba Martinsone5, Silvia Majercakova Albertova6, Eva Gajdošová6, Ariane Baye7, Caroline Deltour7, Victor Martinelli8, Milosh Raykov8, Chryse Hatzichristou9, Olympia Palikara10, Éva Szabó11, Zydre Arlauskaite12, Danai Athanasiou9, Orlean Brown-Earle13, Gino Casale14, Aikaterini Lampropoulou9, Aleksandra Mikhailova15, Marina Pinskaya15, Roman Zvyagintsev15.
Abstract
School climate is a topic of increasing importance internationally. The current study investigated the established measurement invariance of an eight-factor school climate scale using a multinational sample of secondary students. School climate factor means across 14 international groups were compared and findings on the association between school climate factors and mental health were also investigated. Findings, from this study, illustrate several cross-national similarities regarding the ways in which secondary students perceive school climate and the influence of school climate on student mental health. These findings can support school psychologists' efforts to identify strategies and supports that improve the school environment in areas that are most consistently related to student experiences, such as school safety and school connectedness. Implications, limitations, and future directions are discussed. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34014698 DOI: 10.1037/spq0000430
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sch Psychol ISSN: 2578-4218