This cross-sectional study analyzed data from 364,143 students in 492 high schools who completed the Georgia School Climate Survey during the 2017-2018 school year. Through latent profile analysis, we identified that student perceptions of school climate could be classified into three distinct profiles, including positive, moderate, and negative climate. Using multinomial logistic regression, we then identified school and student characteristics that predicted student classification in the student profiles using the total sample and subsamples by race/ethnicity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSchool 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.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGiven general trends in extant research on the impact of prekindergarten and that the structure and implementation of prekindergarten programs vary by state, researchers, educators, and policymakers are raising questions about what works, for whom, under what conditions, and the cost-benefit of such endeavors. Yet not all states have formally examined program impacts and few datasets have been expressly collected to evaluate effects. The current data article represents empirical examinations in the state of Connecticut on the comparability of treatment and control groups, tests of the robustness of impact estimates, and the psychometric properties of outcome measures.
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