Scale of Perceptions of Future Primary School Teachers on Unaccompanied Foreign Minors: Exploratory and Confirmatory Analysis
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Serrano García, Jennifer; Rakdani-Arif Billah, Fátima Zahra; Olmedo Moreno, Eva María; Expósito López, JorgeEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Instruments Exploratory analysis Confirmatory analysis
Fecha
2024-07-25Referencia bibliográfica
Serrano-García, Jennifer, Fátima Zahra Rakdani-Arif Billah, Eva María Olmedo-Moreno, and Jorge Expósito-López. 2024. Scale of Perceptions of Future Primary School Teachers on Unaccompanied Foreign Minors: Exploratory and Confirmatory Analysis. Social Sciences 13: 392. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13080392
Patrocinador
ProyExcel_00104; MCIN/AEI 10.13039/501100011033; ‘Invest in your future’ ESF funds; ‘European Union NextGenerationEU/PRTR’Resumen
Unaccompanied foreign minors (UFMs) face stigmatisation and social exclusion in Spanish
territory. Given their growing presence in schools, it is crucial that trainee teachers have valid and real
information about these students in order to provide equitable, personalised, and quality education to
all their students in the near future and to mitigate any uninformed prejudices and stigma developed
before they enter the classroom. This study seeks to validate a scale designed to assess the perceptions
of pre-service teachers about UFMs (n = 169). The objective of this study was to validate a scale
designed to assess the perceptions of pre-service teachers about UFMs (n = 169). All participants were
studying primary education at the University of Granada (Spain) [♂ = 131 (77.5%); ♀ = 37 (21.9%)].
Methodology: A quantitative, descriptive, cross-sectional, ex post facto, and quantitative study was
conducted. The data were analyzed with IBM SPSS® 28.0 and IBM Amos Graphics® 23.0 programs.
Results: A multidimensional scale was developed with a Cronbach’s alpha of 0.858 and McDonald’s
omega of 0.859, consisting of a total of 26 indicators divided into three factors: socio-educational
characteristic (n = 13), social threat (n = 7), and physical and emotional well-being (n = 6). The general
scale showed high reliability and acceptable fit (p < 0.001; KMO = 0.880; GFI = 0.832; IFI = 0.925;
NFI = 0.816; CFI = 0.924; SMSR = 0.058). CFA reports that the items with the highest factor loadings
are related to determining whether these minors respect cultural differences, are involved in drug
trafficking, and arrive in Spanish territory with significant malnutrition. However, the items with
the lowest factor loadings are linked to understanding the type of academic education these minors
have, whether they consume alcohol, or if they require teachers with intercultural competencies
to help them integrate socially. Conclusions: A reliable and robust scale was developed to assess
the perceptions of pre-service primary school teachers about unaccompanied foreign minors. This
instrument can be used to identify the knowledge of teachers in training, which allows training
actions to be implemented in the context of higher education to raise awareness, detect biases, and
make this vulnerable group visible.