The multidimensional student well-being (MSW) instrument: Conceptualisation, measurement, and differences between Indigenous and non-Indigenous primary and secondary students — Rhonda Craven (2024) | RDL Network
The multidimensional student well-being (MSW) instrument: Conceptualisation, measurement, and differences between Indigenous and non-Indigenous primary and secondary students
Enabling children's and youth's well-being is widely valued by families and communities worldwide. However, there is no general agreement about the structure and measurement of well-being in schooling contexts, nor in particular for Indigenous students who comprise some of the most educationally disadvantaged populations in the world. We theorised a multidimensional student well-being model and the Multidimensional Student Well-being (MSW) instrument, grounded on recent research. We investigated its structure, measurement, and relation to correlates of well-being for a matched sample of 1,405 Australian students (Indigenous, N = 764; non-Indigenous, N = 641) at three time-points, 10–12 months apart. Analyses supported an a priori multidimensional model of 6 higher-order domains of well-being, represented by 15 first-order factors. This structure was invariant across Indigenous and non-Indigenous, male and female, and primary and secondary schooling levels. Correlates provided support for convergent and discriminant validity. There was a downward trend in well-being over time, which calls for attention to multidimensional domains of students' well-being to promote healthy development throughout school life and beyond. The results support a multidimensional model of student well-being appropriate for primary and secondary schooling and both Indigenous and non-Indigenous students.
Rhonda Craven, Herbert W. Marsh, Alexander Seeshing Yeung, Diego Itiberê Cunha Vasconcellos, Anthony Dillon, Richard M. Ryan, Janet Mooney, Alicia Franklin, Lily Barclay, Annalies Van Westenbrugge
Kurtis Pankow, Nathan King, Melanie Li, Jin Byun, Liam Jugoon, Daniel Rivera, Gina Dimitropoulos, Scott Burton Patten, Jonathan Kingslake, Charles Keown‐Stoneman, Anne Duffy
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