DOI
10.21768/ejopa.v6i3.5
Abstract
For the study discussed in this article, the authors developed a survey instrument to assess civic engagement among college students in China. Derived from focus-group interviews and extant literature on civic engagement, the survey was administered to 587 students from three universities in Southern China. Exploratory factor analysis was conducted on a randomly split-half sample, and a subsequent confirmatory factor analysis was conducted on the other split-half sample to evaluate measurement structure and measurement invariance of the survey. A total of 22 items were included in the final measurement model. The authors identified five first-order factors from the survey (i.e., helping others, community service, acting on social problems, civic salience, and civic responsibilities), which loaded on two second-order factors (i.e., civic actions and civic attitudes). The authors also tested measurement invariance across male and female participants in the sample. Implications of the second-order factor structures and measurement invariance in future research on civic engagement in China are discussed.
Recommended Citation
Zaff, Jonathan F.; Pan, Jingtong; Zhang, Wei; and Zhen, Shuangju
(2017)
"Civic Intentions and Actions: Exploring Civic Engagement among College Students in Mainland China,"
eJournal of Public Affairs: Vol. 6:
Iss.
3, Article 5.
DOI: 10.21768/ejopa.v6i3.5
Available at:
https://bearworks.missouristate.edu/ejopa/vol6/iss3/5