Initial psychometric evidence from a scale of mistreatment of thesis advisor (EMAT)

Translated title of the contribution: Initial psychometric evidence from a scale of mistreatment of thesis advisor (EMAT)

Oscar Javier Mamani-Benito, José Ventura-León, Renzo Felipe Carranza Esteban, Madona Tito-Betancur, Kristel Raquel Hilasaca-Mamani, Esmeralda Marleny Rojas Bellido

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

6 Scopus citations

Abstract

Introduction: The creation of measurement instruments are significant contributions to the measurement and advancement of scientific research. Objective: To design and validate a Thesis Advisor Abuse Scale (EMAT) in a sample of Peruvian thesis students. Methods: Instrumental design study where a scale of 20 items distributed in 3 factors (advisor, jury and administrative) was designed and validated. It had the participation of 274 thesis students (61.7% women). The Aiken V coefficient was used to analyze the evidence of content-based validity, the confirmatory factor analysis was used for construct validity, and reliability was studied through the Omega coefficient. Results: Adequate psychometric properties were obtained. The 20 items of the EMAT received a favorable evaluation through expert judgment, the confirmatory factor analysis supports the internal structure of 3 factors, reporting satisfactory goodness-of-fit índices, in addition, the correlation between factors was significant (P<.05) and the reliability acceptable. Conclusion: The EMAT is valid and reliable for measuring mistreatment of the thesis advisor.

Translated title of the contributionInitial psychometric evidence from a scale of mistreatment of thesis advisor (EMAT)
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)298-304
Number of pages7
JournalEducacion Medica
Volume22
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Nov 2021

Keywords

  • Mistreatment
  • Peru
  • Thesis advisor
  • Validation study

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