Title of article :
Modeling the Bullying Prevention Program Preferences
of Educators: A Discrete Choice Conjoint Experiment
Author/Authors :
Charles E. Cunningham، نويسنده , , Tracy Vaillancourt &
Heather Rimas، نويسنده , , Ken Deal، نويسنده , , Lesley Cunningham &
Kathy Short، نويسنده , , Yvonne Chen، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Abstract :
We used discrete choice conjoint analysis to
model the bullying prevention program preferences of
educators. Using themes from computerized decision
support lab focus groups (n=45 educators), we composed
20 three-level bullying prevention program design attributes.
Each of 1,176 educators completed 25 choice tasks
presenting experimentally varied combinations of the
study’s attribute levels. Latent class analysis yielded three
segments with different preferences. Decision Sensitive
educators (31%) preferred that individual schools select
bullying prevention programs. In contrast, Support Sensitive
educators (51%) preferred that local school boards
chose bullying prevention programs. This segment preferred
more logistical and social support at every stage of
the adoption, training, implementation, and long term
maintenance processes. Cost Sensitive educators (16%)
showed a stronger preference for programs minimizing
costs, training, and implementation time demands. They felt
prevention programs were less effective and that the time
and space in the curriculum for bullying prevention was
less adequate. They were less likely to believe that bullying
prevention was their responsibility and more likely to agree
that prevention was the responsibility of parents. All
segments preferred programs supported by the anecdotal
reports of colleagues from other schools rather than those
based on scientific evidence. To ensure that the bullying
prevention options available reflect the complex combination
of attributes influencing real world adoption decisions,
program developers need to accommodate the differing
views of the Decision, Support, and Cost Sensitive segments
while maximizing the support of parents and
students.
Keywords :
Bullying . Prevention . Conjoint analysis .Preferences . School
Journal title :
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology
Journal title :
Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology