Intercultural sensitivity among university students: measurement of the construct and its relationship with international mobility programmes
Metadata
Show full item recordAuthorship
Rodríguez-Izquierdo, Rosa M.


Palabras clave
Intercultural sensitivityPsychometric properties
Inventory
Mobility programmes
University students
Publication date
2018Abstract
The purpose of this study was to validate the IDI (Intercultural
Development Inventory) and to assess the impact of international mobility
programmes on the intercultural sensitivity of university students. For this, a
quasi-experimental study was carried out using a longitudinal design of repeated
pre-test and post-test measures, with an experimental group of students who
carried out international mobility programmes and a control group of students
who did not. The sample consisted of 3,047 university students. The inventory
yielded a five-factor structure (negation/defence, minimization, reversion, acceptance/
adaptation and encapsulated marginality) with alpha coefficients ranging
from .82 to .91, revealing adequate reliability and validity. The results indicate the
effectiveness of the IDI to measure intercultural sensitivity. Although the post-test
scores are higher than the pre-test scores for both groups, there are significant
differences in favour of the experim ...
The purpose of this study was to validate the IDI (Intercultural
Development Inventory) and to assess the impact of international mobility
programmes on the intercultural sensitivity of university students. For this, a
quasi-experimental study was carried out using a longitudinal design of repeated
pre-test and post-test measures, with an experimental group of students who
carried out international mobility programmes and a control group of students
who did not. The sample consisted of 3,047 university students. The inventory
yielded a five-factor structure (negation/defence, minimization, reversion, acceptance/
adaptation and encapsulated marginality) with alpha coefficients ranging
from .82 to .91, revealing adequate reliability and validity. The results indicate the
effectiveness of the IDI to measure intercultural sensitivity. Although the post-test
scores are higher than the pre-test scores for both groups, there are significant
differences in favour of the experimental group (p = .000) in all factors except the
negation/defence stage. The conclusions focus on the implications of this study
for curriculum development and policy at an educational level.