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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Validity and Internal Consistency of the Preschool-FLAT, a New Tool for the Assessment of Food Literacy in Young Children from the Training-To-Health Project
Garden TabacchiGiuseppe MessinaGiuseppe BattagliaAntonio PaoliMarianna BellafioreAntonio Palmasubject
MalevalidityPsychometrics030309 nutrition & dieteticsHealth Toxicology and MutagenesisassessmentModel fittinglcsh:MedicineIntervention groupstructural equation modelingfood literacy; validity; consistency; preschool education; assessment; structural equation modelingArticle03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineInternal consistencySurveys and QuestionnairesAssessment; Consistency; Food literacy; Preschool education; Structural equation modeling; ValidityContent validityHumans030212 general & internal medicineFood literacyChild0303 health sciencesSettore M-EDF/02 - Metodi E Didattiche Delle Attivita' SportiveSchoolsconsistencylcsh:RPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthDiscriminant validityConstruct validityReproducibility of Resultsfood literacyHealth LiteracyItalyFoodLatent Class AnalysisScale (social sciences)Child PreschoolFemalepreschool educationPsychologySettore M-EDF/01 - Metodi E Didattiche Delle Attivita' MotorieClinical psychologydescription
Background: The importance of assessing “food literacy” since youth has been highlighted and, to this purpose, valid and consistent instruments are needed. This study aimed to assess the validity and internal consistency of the preschool-FLAT (Food Literacy Assessment Tool). Methods. 505 children from 21 kindergartens, recruited within the Training-to-Health Project in Palermo (Italy), underwent oral sessions and activities on food-related aspects. Their knowledge/skills were recorded in the preschool-FLAT. The following scale measures were assessed: Content validity; internal consistency (Chronbach’s alpha coefficients); construct validity (Structural Equation Modeling—SEM); discriminant validity (intervention subgroup of 100 children vs. control group of 27 children). Results. Acceptable content validity of a 16-items scale and overall adequate internal consistency were revealed: Content validity index (CVI) 0.94, content validity ratio (CVR) 0.88, Chronbach’s alpha 0.76. The SEM revealed a 4-factor model fitting the data well (comparative fit index 0.939, root mean square error of approximation 0.033). Discriminant validity was good (intervention group scoring higher than control, p < 0.001, unpaired Student’s t-test). Conclusion. The preschool-FLAT revealed good psychometric properties, adequate validity and internal consistency. This is the only instrument in the literature specifically targeted to 3–6 years old children that could be effectively used to assess food literacy.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2020-04-01 | International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health; Volume 17; Issue 8; Pages: 2759 |