Assessment
of Multicultural Competence Scales for Social Work Practitioners
Karina L. Walters, Ph.D.
Darrell P. Wheeler, Ph.D.,
M.P.H.
Assessment of Multicultural
Competence Scales for Social Work Practitioners is the first step in a
comprehensive assessment of multicultural counseling competencies among social
work students. It is a multi-site
study, with data drawn from a cross-sectional mail survey of masters level
social work students from 5 schools of social work, and is designed to assess
the appropriateness and validity of two self-report inventories used in
counseling psychology.
This article presents
preliminary results. (For further
background information on the study, see Practice and Research, Spring, 1997.)
For
nearly four decades, social work educators have emphasized the necessity for
multiculturally competent practice (Van Soest, 1995). Social work researchers,
however, have not adequately documented practitioner levels of multicultural
competence and how these levels of cultural competence ultimately affect
practice interactions, treatment efficacy, and treatment outcomes (McMahon
& Allen-Meares, 1992). The discrepancy between the call for multiculturally
competent practice and the lack of documentation is due in part to insufficient
development of multicultural competence practice measures.
This
study addresses such inadequacies with the development and administration of a
multicultural social work practice inventory that assesses behavioral and
attitudinal levels of multicultural knowledge, awareness,
practitioner-client relationship behaviors, and skills (i.e.,
KABS). KABS consists of modified items from two multicultural self-report
inventories utilized in counseling psychology (i.e., the MCI by Sodowsky,
Taffe, Gutkin, & Wise, 1994; and the MCAS-B by Ponterotto, Sanchez, &
Magids, 1991).
Data
in this preliminary report were drawn from a cross-sectional mail survey of 442
masters level social work students from 5 schools of social work (1 west coast,
1 Midwest, 1 southeast, 1 northeast, and 1 Mid-Atlantic region). A multimethod
approach was employed to examine reliabilities, observed interscale
correlations, and disattenuated correlations across instruments as indicators
of the comparability of the constructs being measured by each scale for social
work practice students. There were four main objectives of the study: (1) to
review the psychometric properties of the MCI and the MCAS-B for their
compatibility and appropriateness for social work practice; (2) to examine the
factorial (i.e., construct) validity of each instrument; (3) to examine the
dimensional nature of the competency construct across both scales by combining
them in a factor analysis; and (4) to examine the criterion-related and
convergent validity of the instruments.
Method
Participants
Of
the 442 participants, 87% were women and 13% were men. Yearly average household
income ranged from $28,000 to $37,999 for the entire sample with 20% of the
sample reporting a yearly household income in excess of $80,000. Over
three-quarters of the sample were first year MSW students. Thirty-six percent
reported previous multicultural training experience. In terms of racial
self-identification, 9% of the sample self-identified as Asian/ Pacific
Islander, 12% as Black/African American/Carribean, 10% as Latino/a, 66% as
White/European American, and 2% as multiracial. The majority of the sample
self-identified as mainly heterosexual (91%). Approximately 9% self-identifyed
as gay, lesbian, or bisexual.
Measures
In addition to basic
background characteristics, questionnaire items focused on multicultural
competencies (i.e., KABS) and levels of sensitivity to discriminatory
attitudes.
Multicultural
Counseling Competencies. The two
measures used to assess multicultural counseling competencies were the MCI and
the MCAS-B.
The MCI (Sodowsky et al., 1994) is a multifactor 40 item
self-report measure of multicultural counseling competencies. Participants were
asked to indicate “how accurately each statement describes you when working in
a multicultural counseling [replaced with social work practice] situation.”
Each item was scored using a 4-point scale ranging from very inaccurate
(1) to very accurate (4). The MCI consists of four subscales:
knowledge (11 items), awareness (10 items), relationship behaviors (8 items),
and skills (11 items). The subscales have demonstrated moderate to high
reliability in the present sample, ranging from .65 for the awareness subscale
to .85 for the skills subscale. The MCI items tend to be more behavioral than
attitudinal.
The MCAS-B (Ponterotto et al., 1994) is a multifactor 45
item self-report measure of multicultural counseling competencies. Participants
were asked to rate the “truth of each item as it applies” to them on a 7-point
scale ranging from not at all true (1) to totally true
(7). The scale consists of three subscales: knowledge/skills scale (28 items),
awareness scale (14 items), and a social desirability cluster (3 items). The
awareness and knowledge/skills scales demonstrated adequate internal
consistency in the present sample (alpha = .72 and alpha = .87, respectively).
Previous research raised face validity concerns regarding the combination of
knowledge and skills into a single scale (Pope-Davis & Dings, 1995). The
high correlations with the awareness scale suggest that there may be only one
dimension of multicultural competence being measured, despite previous factor
analytic studies that suggest there might be two dimensions. Ponterotto et al.
(1996) stated that the scales need to be interpreted with caution until further
rigorous testing is employed. In
contrast to the MCI, the MCAS-B items tend to be more attitudinal than
behavioral.
Discriminatory
Attitudes. The Quick Discrimination
Index (QDI; Ponterotto, Burkard, et al., 1995) is a 30-item Likert-type
self-report inventory of gender and racial attitudes and general sensitivity to
discriminatory attitudes. The total score for the QDI measures “overall
sensitivity, awareness, and receptivity to cultural diversity and gender
equality.” Participants were asked to rate their level of agreement from strongly
disagree (1) to strongly agree (5) in response to items
such as “I feel ok about my son or daughter dating someone from a different
race,” or “I think that it is (or would be) important for my children to attend
schools that are racially mixed.” Internal consistency in the present sample
was high (alpha = .87).
Procedure
This study constituted the first step in a
comprehensive assessment of multicultural counseling competencies among social
work students. The five schools of social work were contacted and asked to
distribute the self-administered surveys to their entire first year MSW class
within the first 2 weeks of their first semester (the second year class was
also given the survey at one site). The study’s title “ Multicultural Training
Project Survey” and eligibility criteria (enrolled in MSW program) were clearly
printed on the top page of the questionnaire. The introduction invited
voluntary participation and respondents were not remunerated for participation
in the study. Completion of the survey took approximately 45 minutes. The
response rates for the schools ranged from 18% to 63%.
Results
The MCI and MCAS-B: Social Workers Compared with Psychology
Interns
In examining the mean levels
of multicultural competence across the MCI measure for all subscales (see
Figure 1), social work student scores in the present sample were comparable
with psychology graduate student intern scores in another study (data extracted
from the Pope-Davis & Dings, 1994). Psychology students had slightly higher
knowledge and skill scale scores, which is not surprising since they were
already in field internships when they participated in the Pope-Davis &
Dings (1994) study, and, as a result, most likely had a few years of clinical
classroom preparation already. Interestingly, social work students’ mean scores
were slightly higher than
psychology interns with respect to self-awareness and relationship behaviors. In contrast, however, in a comparison of the mean scores between social work students and psychology students on the MCAS-B, the psychology interns tend to score considerably higher for both knowledge/skills (mean = 131.8 vs. 102.9) and awareness subscales (mean = 86.4 vs. 75.1).
|
|
Construct Validity of the
MCI and MCAS-B
Within
each instrument and across scales, we examined interscale correlations and inter-correlations. The observed interscale
correlations within each instrument were fairly comparable to those obtained in
previous studies, suggesting that each instrument is not performing in an
unusual manner for social work students. Overall, the intercorrelations between
the instruments (see Table 1) also suggest that there are only a few problems
with the scales. Specifically, the correlation for MCI knowledge with the
MCAS-B knowledge/skills subscale was fairly strong (r = .52), as was the correlation
between the MCAS-B knowledge/skills with MCI skill (r = .51). The
correlation, however, between the MCAS-B awareness and MCI awareness was quite
low
(r = .04), suggesting
that these two constructs might not be capturing the same phenomenon.
Table 1. Intercorrelations
and Reliabilities for the MCAS-B and MCI.
|
|
Know R |
Aware R |
Know |
Aware |
Skills |
Relate |
|
Know R |
a = .90 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Aware R |
.38 |
a = .70 |
|
|
|
|
|
Know |
.52 |
.22 |
a = .80 |
|
|
|
|
Aware |
.43 |
.04 |
.45 |
a = .65 |
|
|
|
Skills |
.51 |
.09 |
.61 |
.40 |
a = .84 |
|
|
Relate |
.26 |
-.02 |
.25 |
.28 |
.23 |
a = .73 |
|
Note: R indicates this is a MCAS-B scale, all others are the MCI. Cronbach Alphas are along the diagonal. |
||||||
Factorial
validity. Factor analysis was used in this study for
two purposes: (1) to establish the factor structure of the MCI, MCAS-B, and the
combination of MCI-MCAS-B among social work students; and (2) to establish
empirically the construct validity for the competency constructs (i.e., KABS)
among social workers. A principal components analysis using varimax rotation on
all factors was performed and resulted in a 4-factor solution for the MCI, a
5-factor solution for MCAS-B, and a 4-factor solution for the combined scale.
Examination of the scree tests confirmed the factor solutions. The 4-factor
extraction for the MCI (n = 279) accounted for 23% of the common
variance and resulted in factor loadings and eigenvalues as follows: Skills
(.46-.73; eigen = 8.99); Knowledge (.43-.67; eigen = 2.73); Awareness (.41-.70;
eigen = 2.32); and Relationship Behavior (.46-.63); eigen = 1.99). Interestingly,
the MCAS-B (n = 351) revealed five factors in contrast to the
anticipated two factors. The 5-factor extraction for the MCAS-B accounted for
19% of the common variance with the following factor loadings: Skills/Knowledge
items (.38-.74; eigen = 8.3); Multicultural Readings/Concepts (.65-.80; eigen
= 4.6); Social/History (.41-.70; eigen =
3.02); Discrimination (.27-.70; eigen = 1.80); and Awareness (.42-.66; eigen =
1.5). The 4-factor extraction for the combined MCAS-MCI scale (n = 241)
produced a 4-factor solution that accounted for 18% of the common variance. The
factor loadings were as follows: Knowledge (.35-.72; eigen = 14.47); Skills
(.31-.68; eigen = 5.42); Awareness (.34-.71; eigen = 4.09); Relationship (.32-.67; eigen = 3.51).
Discussion of the 5-factor structure is beyond the scope of this report as is
the combined scale analysis. We will,
however, be analyzing these findings in future analyses.
In
selecting the best factor structure for social work students, our primary
criteria were the interpretability and clarity of each factor in the final
factor loadings. Using this as a guideline, it is clear that the 4-factor
structure and constructs found in the MCI (i.e., KABS) is the model best
represented in our data, a conclusion confirmed by combined scale factor
analysis. The factor analytic solution reflected the anticipated item
groupings; thus, the MCI provides preliminary evidence of the multicultural
counseling construct’s (i.e., KABS) applicability to social work students.
Using
the Group-Difference approach to assessing criterion-related validity (Walsh
& Betz, 1990), we examined the MCI score differences between those who had
previous multicultural training and those who had none. For clarity in
interpretation, we included only first year MSW students (n = 339).
Analyses of the previous training variable were mixed: the “trained” sample
scored significantly higher than the comparison group on two of the MCI
subscales. Specifically, students who had previous multicultural training
scored significantly higher than students who had no previous training in terms
of multicultural competency skills (mean = 3.19 vs. mean = 3.04), t(239) =
2.33, p. < .05, and awareness (mean = 3.04 vs. mean = 2.73), t(239) = 2.65, p < .05 .
There were no significant differences in training level by multicultural
knowledge or relationship competencies.
We
also wanted to examine if the subscales of the MCI were appropriately
correlated with similar but distinct constructs. For example, if the participants’
scores on competency were strongly correlated with their scores on a measure of
sensitivity to discrimination (e.g., QDI), this would provide more evidence
that the multicultural competency subscales had construct validity. We chose
the QDI and again used only first year students. Results indicated that
competency knowledge (r = .32, p < .000); awareness (r
= .34, p < .000); and skill (r = .24, p <.00) were
all moderately positively correlated with sensitivity to discrimination,
providing further evidence of construct validity for the knowledge, awareness,
and skill competency constructs among social work students.
Conclusion
The psychometric properties
of the MCI and the MCAS-B appear fairly strong for both instruments. Internal
consistency was moderate to high across all subscales. Preliminary factor
analyses suggest that the MCI as a competency measure might be applicable to
social work practice. Moreover, analyses provided evidence for the factorial,
criterion, and convergent validity of the dimensional nature of the competency
constructs (i.e., KABS). The results are preliminary and should be interpreted
with caution until further analyses support these findings. Despite the
preliminary nature of the findings, they appear to support using the MCI as a
measure of multicultural practice competencies in social work training as well
as practice. Future development of social work-specific multicultural practice
instruments should incorporate the multicultural competency KABS constructs.
The discrepancy between the call for multiculturally competent practice and the
lack of documentation is due, in part, to insufficient development of
multicultural competence practice measures.
The study’s principal
investigators are Karina L. Walters, Ph.D. and Darrell P. Wheeler, Ph.D.,
M.P.H.
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