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The Distinctiveness of Affects in Specific School Subjects: An Application of Confirmatory Factor Analysis With the National Educational Longitudinal Study of 1988

Herbert W. Marsh and Alexander Seeshing Yeung

University of Western Sydney, Macarthur, Australia

Does academic affect generalize across different school subjects, or is it specific to particular subjects? Substantively, this study considers the distinctiveness of affects associated with different school subjects and critically evaluates this distinctiveness in relation to school grades and standardized test scores. Methodologically, the study describes problems related to combining responses to single-item self-rating scales, adapts confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) models of multitrait-multimethod (MTMM) data to address this problem, and provides guidelines for more effective use of the National Educational Longitudinal Survey of 1988 (NELS88) data. A large, nationally representative sample of eighth-grade students (N = 24,599) rated three affects (looking forward to, perceived usefulness, anxiety) in each of four school subjects (mathematics, science, social studies, English). The CFA models showed that simple scale scores were inappropriate. MTMM models indicated that ratings in different school subjects were very distinct, and extended models incorporating school grades and test scores supported this subject specificity of academic affect.

American Educational Research Journal, Vol. 33, No. 3, 665-689 (1996)
DOI: 10.3102/00028312033003665


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H. W. Marsh and A. S. Yeung
Longitudinal Structural Equation Models of Academic Self-Concept and Achievement: Gender Differences in the Development of Math and English Constructs
American Educational Research Journal, January 1, 1998; 35(4): 705 - 738.
[Abstract] [PDF]



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