This paper reports on a research study that sought to support efforts to include student perceptions of school climate and climate ratings as a valid assessment of school climate, which can in turn be used by school and district leaders to measure, improve, and sustain policy practices that build capacity and support school improvement.
State and local education agencies continue to make an effort to systematically assess school climate through student surveys. These assessments typically collect data from individual students about their perceptions of different components of the school and their relationship to individuals in the school and aggregate those responses to the school level. To date, few researchers have examined the extent to which aggregating students’ perceptions of climate is a valid and reliable way to understand climate as a characteristic of the school. If this hypothesis is true, there are opportunities for school and district leaders to use this information to improve and sustain school climate practices. This study used middle and high school-grade student-level responses from the Georgia Student Health Survey and tested the extent to which the different dimensions of school climate varied across school and were associated with school behavioral data. The authors’ findings suggest that student perceptions of climate are multi-dimensional at the student level at the student level, but not necessarily at the school level. Indeed, school climate appears to be uni-dimensional at the school level and is robustly associated with administrator-reported behavioral data. This study supports efforts to include student perceptions of school climate and school climate ratings as valid assessments of school climate. School and district leaders can use school climate ratings as a valid way to measure, improve, and sustain practices that build capacity and support school improvement. (Published Abstract Provided)