Methods: A purposive sample of 318 school district employees was obtained to examine the factor structure and reliability of the MVAIS. Much of the sample self-identified as teachers (50.3%) followed by health personnel and social service support (13.9%); those not reporting (10.4%); staff (9.2%); administrators (8.5%); and instructional support staff (7.6%). Many worked in elementary schools (43.7%), followed by high schools (27.8%), middle schools (19%) or multiple school levels (7%).
Confirmatory factor analysis was used because of the a priori factor structure of the MVAIS. Several tests of model fit including CFI, TLI, RMSEA, SRMR, and X2/df ratio were used to assess the model. Chronbach’s alpha was calculated for reliability.
Results: The alpha coefficients for each construct, implementation (.947), preparation (.907), accessibility (.889), and collaboration (.941), indicate high levels of item association between the items. All tests for model fit met their respective cut score criterion which indicates that the proposed model was statistically appropriate (CFI=.96; TLI=.95; RMSEA=.09; SRMR=.084; and X2/df=3.475). A three-factor structure of the MVAIS as perceived by an entire school district still explains implementation.
Implications: The purpose of this study is to examine the factor structure and reliability of the MVAIS with a sample of an entire school district. This study provides supporting evidence for the three-factor structure of the MVAIS. Preparation, accessibility, and collaboration, as presented in the MVAIS, are still perceived as major factors in facilitating homeless policy in schools. Future study could examine the factor structure to focus on how implementation is perceived in a specific profession such as teaching or administration. Scale utility is still an important area for future study. As it stands now, higher scores of the MVAIS indicate higher levels of implementation or the three constructs, but they have yet to be tied to actual outcomes. Using the MVAIS to examine how implementation of the policy has addressed a specific outcome, such as absences or grades, is an area of future study. The McKinney-Vento Act is the premier policy addressing homelessness in our schools and future study must be done to examine the efficacy of its provisions.