Psychometric Development of an Instrument Measuring Social Bullying in Nursing Academia: Item Development and Content Validation

Nurse Educ. 2021 May-Jun;46(3):E45-E49. doi: 10.1097/NNE.0000000000000907.

Abstract

Background: Social bullying in academic nursing schools is an understudied area, yet extant research shows it is prevalent.

Purpose: The purpose of this study was to generate a formal definition for academic social bullying and content validate an instrument measuring it in academic nursing.

Methods: Classic psychometric theory and survey design were used to develop an instrument measuring academic social bullying. Extensive literature review and analysis of existing instruments were conducted; 108 items indicating bullying behaviors and organizational characteristics were created. This study targeted establishing initial content validity. Forty nurse experts who had experienced or published on academic bullying were invited; 24 responded. Experts rated agreement with relevance/appropriateness of items using a Likert scale and provided comments.

Results: Forty items with content validity indexes near 0.80 and supportive comments were retained. A formal definition was developed from experts' feedback.

Conclusions: Insights regarding differences between bullying and incivility were obtained.

MeSH terms

  • Bullying* / psychology
  • Humans
  • Nursing Education Research
  • Psychometrics
  • Reproducibility of Results
  • Schools, Nursing*
  • Surveys and Questionnaires*