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Copyright International Journal of Medical Education (IJME) 2011

Abstract

[...] a more rigorous view of alpha is that it cannot simply be interpreted as an index for the internal consistency of a test. 5, 15, 17 Factor Analysis can be used to identify the dimensions of a test.18 Other reliable techniques have been used and we encourage the reader to consult the paper "Applied Dimensionality and Test Structure Assessment with the STARTM Mathematics Test" and to compare methods for assessing the dimensionality and underlying structure of a test.19 Alpha, therefore, does not simply measure the unidimensionality of a set of items, but can be used to confirm whether or not a sample of items is actually unidimensional. 5 On the other hand if a test has more than one concept or construct, it may not make sense to report alpha for the test as a whole as the larger number of questions will inevitable inflate the value of alpha. In principle therefore, alpha should be calculated for each of the concepts rather than for the entire test or scale.\n More importantly, alpha is grounded in the 'tau equivalent model' which assumes that each test item measures the same latent trait on the same scale. [...] if multiple factors/traits underlie the items on a scale, as revealed by Factor Analysis, this assumption is violated and alpha underestimates the reliability of the test.17 If the number of test items is too small it will also violate the assumption of tau-equivalence and will underestimate reliability.20 When test items meet the assumptions of the tau-equivalent model, alpha approaches a better estimate of reliability.

Details

Title
Making sense of Cronbach's alpha
Author
Tavakol, Mohsen; Dennick, Reg
Pages
53-55
Section
Editorial
Publication year
2011
Publication date
2011
Publisher
International Journal of Medical Education (IJME)
e-ISSN
20426372
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
898889039
Copyright
Copyright International Journal of Medical Education (IJME) 2011