Teachers’ collective efficacy with regard to inclusive practices—characteristics of a new scale and analyses from Canada, Germany and Switzerland

Margarita Knickenberg, Harry Kullmann, Sergej Wüthrich, Caroline Sahli Lozano, Tim Loreman, Umesh Sharma, Elias Avramidis, Pearl Subban, Stuart Woodcock

    Research output: Journal PublicationArticlepeer-review

    1 Citation (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Introduction: While teachers’ individual and collective efficacy has been extensively studied with regard to promoting students’ academic success, teachers’ collective efficacy regarding inclusive practices has been largely neglected thus far, especially from an international perspective. International comparisons are of particular interest to any country or school system, respectively, as they can help to identify alternative approaches and opportunities for inclusive school development. The scale examined in this paper is ascertaining teachers’ collective efficacy with regard to inclusive education (TEIP-C) and is derived from a scale measuring (individual) Teachers’ Efficacy for Inclusive Practices (TEIP). This scale comprises three subscales termed Inclusive Instruction, Managing Behavior and Collaboration. Our major aim was to validate the tripartite structure of the original TEIP scale for the new TEIP-C scale and to demonstrate measurement invariance of the latter employing an international sample. Methods: The sample comprised 897 teachers from Canada, Germany and Switzerland. Different Confirmatory Factor Analysis (CFA) models were combined with Exploratory Structural Equation Models (ESEM). Measurement invariance across countries was examined by means of a multiple group confirmatory factor analysis (MGCFA) approach. Afterwards, the variables gender, age and teaching experience were included simultaneously as predictors of collective teaching efficacy to specify a multiple indicator multiple cause model (MIMIC). Results: We successfully validated the tripartite structure of the original TEIP scale for the new TEIP-C scale and demonstrated its measurement invariance employing samples from Canada, Germany, and Switzerland. Based on similar validations, it now appears possible for researchers to freely combine either of the six subscales focusing on teachers’ individual or collective efficacy with regard to inclusive education in their questionnaires in future studies. While the three country samples did not differ regarding Inclusive Instructions, significant differences in favor of Canadian teachers became apparent for Collaborations (compared to both, Switzerland and Germany) as well as Managing Behavior (Germany). Discussion: Overall, the results underline the comparably high standards of inclusive teaching in Canada. Additional differences on the basis of the two subscales just mentioned pointed to somewhat lower ratings of collective teacher efficacy with respect to inclusive education by female teachers in Canada and Germany and older teachers in Switzerland.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article number1530689
    JournalFrontiers in Psychology
    Volume16
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2025

    Keywords

    • Canada
    • collaboration
    • collective efficacy of teachers
    • Germany
    • inclusive instruction
    • managing behavior
    • scale validation
    • Switzerland

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • General Psychology

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