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Child Maltreatment
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Development and Confirmatory Factor Analysis of the Community Norms of Child Neglect Scale

Rebecca Goodvin

University of Nebraska-Lincoln; Center on Children, Families, and the Law

David R. Johnson

Pennsylvania State University

Sam A. Hardy

University of Virginia

Michelle I. Graef

University of Nebraska-Lincoln; Center on Children, Families, and the Law

Jeff M. Chambers

University of Nebraska-Lincoln; Center on Children, Families, and the Law

This article describes the development of the Community Norms of Child Neglect Scale (CNCNS), a new measure of perceptions of child neglect, for use in community samples. The CNCNS differentiates among four subtypes of neglect (failure to provide for basic needs, lack of supervision, emotional neglect, and educational neglect). Scenarios ranging in seriousness for each subtype were presented to a large community sample (N = 3,809). Confirmatory factor analyses indicated that a four-factor model provided a better fit to the data than did a model specifying only one overall neglect factor, suggesting this sample distinguished among the four subtypes of neglect. The authors tested measurement equivalence across individuals who work with children and lay community respondents and across rural and urban respondents, with results indicating a very similar structure across these groups. These initial reliability and validity data suggest that the CNCNS may be of use in comparing perceptions of child neglect among individuals and across communities.

Key Words: child neglect • norms • perceptions • measure • rural-urban • sentinel

Child Maltreatment, Vol. 12, No. 1, 68-85 (2007)
DOI: 10.1177/1077559506296667


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