Initial Development and Validation of the Student Wellbeing Teacher-Report Scale

Given that youth mental health is associated with success in school and life more broadly, it is important that school-based psychological service providers embrace best-practice prevention and intervention strategies that target mental health when working with student populations. One line of study...

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Veröffentlicht in:School mental health 2019-09, Vol.11 (3), p.578-599
Hauptverfasser: Roberson, Anthony J., Renshaw, Tyler L.
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container_title School mental health
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creator Roberson, Anthony J.
Renshaw, Tyler L.
description Given that youth mental health is associated with success in school and life more broadly, it is important that school-based psychological service providers embrace best-practice prevention and intervention strategies that target mental health when working with student populations. One line of study in this area has begun exploring the incorporation of a dual-factor model of mental health within universal screening systems in schools. The dual-factor model is differentiated from the traditional unidimensional mental health model, which focuses on the presence or absence of psychopathology, by conceptualizing mental health alternatively as consisting of both psychopathology and wellbeing dimensions. The present study involved the preliminary development and validation of the Student Wellbeing Teacher-Report Scale (SWTRS)—a brief behavior rating scale intended as a screening tool for measuring the wellbeing dimension of youths’ mental health at school. Specifically, the study involved drafting pilot items for the SWTRS and explored their latent factor structure, concurrent validity with school-related outcomes (i.e., attendance, academic achievement, and time on-task), as well as concurrent and incremental validity in comparison with two psychopathology screeners. Results suggested that the SWTRS items may better represent three context-specific indicators of youth wellbeing behavior—(a) academic, (b) social, and (c) emotional wellbeing—rather than the hypothesized “feeling good” and “functioning well” dimensions. The SWTRS scores also demonstrated incremental validity and were uniformly stronger concurrent predictors of all school-related outcomes compared to the psychopathology scales. Implications for theory and future research are discussed.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s12310-018-09305-x
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subjects Academic achievement
Adolescents
Behavior
Behavior Rating Scales
Behavioral Science and Psychology
Child and School Psychology
Clinical Psychology
Developmental Psychology
Education
Educational Environment
Elementary School Students
Elementary schools
Health services
Intervention
Medical screening
Mental disorders
Mental Health
Mental Health Programs
Original Paper
Outcomes of Education
Prevention
Psychology
Psychopathology
Quantitative psychology
School Psychology
Screening Tests
Student Welfare
Students
Teacher Role
Test Construction
Test Validity
Usability
Validity
Youth
title Initial Development and Validation of the Student Wellbeing Teacher-Report Scale
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