Sl. Ruffalo et Sn. Elliott, TEACHERS AND PARENTS RATINGS OF CHILDRENS SOCIAL SKILLS - A CLOSER LOOK AT CROSS-INFORMANT AGREEMENTS THROUGH AN ITEM ANALYSIS PROTOCOL, School psychology review, 26(3), 1997, pp. 489-501
Assessment of children's social behavior was investigated with use of
standardized rating scale information (Social Skills Rating System [SS
RS], Gresham & Elliott, 1990) and an item analysis protocol (IAP) to p
rovide a rich combination of assessment information. This combined res
earch methodology was investigated by examining the relationships amon
g 42 mother and father pairs, 24 teachers' SSRS ratings, and raters' b
ehavior and situation item descriptions of 42 kindergarten through fou
rth-grade students. Mothers' and fathers' SSRS Social Skills frequency
and importance ratings for their children were correlated moderately,
with weaker correlations found between mothers' and teachers' frequen
cy ratings and father's and teacher's frequency ratings. The number of
behavioral and situational descriptions provided by mothers, fathers,
and teachers were significantly different. Mothers' and fathers' IAP
response similarity was greater than mothers' and teachers' responses
or fathers' and teachers' responses. These results are discussed withi
n a situation-specificity context, and implications are noted for mult
isource assessment of children's social behavior.