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The OCDQ: A Four Factor Solution for Australian Schools?

MR. A. ROSS THOMAS (Senior Lecturer in Education at the University of New England. He is Associate Editor of the Journal of Educational Administration and Editor of the Commonwealth Council for Educational Administration Newsletter. With W. G. Walker and A. R. Crane Mr. Thomas is joint editor of Explorations in Educational Administration (Queensland University Press. 1972))
MR. R.C. SLATER (Principal of Carlton Primary School, South Australia. Formerly a research officer within the South Australian Department of Education Mr. Slater holds the degree of B.A. (Adelaide) and the Dip.Ed. Admin. (U.N.E.). Currently he is working towards his M.Ed. degree in an extension of the study reported in this article)

Journal of Educational Administration

ISSN: 0957-8234

Article publication date: 1 February 1972

74

Abstract

For almost a decade the OCDQ has proven to be one of the most “popular” instruments in research in educational administration. Developed by Halpin and Croft, the instrument claims to measure eight dimensions of a school's organizational climate. Such scores are then used to classify the school according to which one of six climate categories it belongs. Increasingly, the OCDQ is being subjected to closer scrutiny. Currently in the U.S.A. intense validation studies are in progress. This article reports on a similar study conducted in a sample of 72 primary schools in South Australia. Data from 727 respondents are analysed to produce a four factor solution. The factors are identified as supportiveness, operations emphasis, intimacy and disaffiliation.

Citation

ROSS THOMAS, M.A. and SLATER, M.R.C. (1972), "The OCDQ: A Four Factor Solution for Australian Schools?", Journal of Educational Administration, Vol. 10 No. 2, pp. 197-208. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb009682

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1972, MCB UP Limited

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