Back to Search Start Over

Development and validation of a questionnaire about reasons for academic cheating by nursing students: A cross-sectional study

Authors :
Alotaibi, Jazi Shaydied
Alotaibi, Abdullah Obaid
Manzar, Md Dilshad
Almansour, Ahmed Mansour
Alasiry, Sharifa
Alrasheadi, Bader A.
Alanazy, Wdad
Albougami, Abdulrhman
Kashoo, Faizan Zaffar
Source :
Medicine; June 2024, Vol. 103 Issue: 23 pe38243-e38243, 1p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Cheating behavior is spreading among nursing students worldwide, necessitating the development of a validated questionnaire evaluating the reasons for such behavior. Nursing students (N = 482) from 2 universities in Saudi Arabia participated in this observational study. A survey containing items on socio-demographics and the 33-item Reasons for Cheating Scale (RCS) was completed by the respondents. The RCS had a 1-factor structure; the model fit indices were similar between the 1-, 2-, and 3-factor models, but the inter-factor correlations were too high for the 2- and 3-factor models. The measures of the quality of the factor score estimates were as follows: factor determinacy index, 0.987; expected a posteriori marginal reliability, 0.974; sensitivity ratio, 6.178; and expected percentage of true differences, 97.3%. The measures of the closeness to unidimensionality for the overall RCS were as follows: unidimensional congruence, 0.957; explained common variance, 0.875; and mean item residual absolute loading, 0.223. The intraclass correlation coefficient and McDonald’s omega were 0.96 (CI: 0.93–0.98) and 0.962 (95% CI: 0.958–0.967), respectively. The severity score, infit, and outfit ranged from −0.847 to −2.015, 0.813 to 1.742, and 0.837 to 1.661, respectively. For all RCS items, the thresholds ranked τi1 < τi2 < τi3 < τi4 and showed invariance between the sexes. The RCS showed robust psychometric validity for both classical and item response theory parameters. It also had excellent test-retest reliability, internal consistency, item discrimination, factorial validity, measurement invariance, and ordered threshold level for the responses. Therefore, the RCS is a valid and reliable tool for assessing cheating behavior among nursing students.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00257974 and 15365964
Volume :
103
Issue :
23
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Medicine
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs66609097
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/MD.0000000000038243