The document reports the results of a reliability analysis on a 30-item scale called Versi Analyze Scale. It found:
1) The Cronbach's alpha coefficient for the 30 items was 0.882, indicating good internal consistency.
2) Item-total correlations ranged from 0.039 to 0.614, with most items moderately correlated with the total scale score.
3) Removing any individual item would not significantly increase the overall Cronbach's alpha coefficient, suggesting all 30 items are measuring the intended underlying construct.
The document reports the results of a reliability analysis on a 30-item scale called Versi Analyze Scale. It found:
1) The Cronbach's alpha coefficient for the 30 items was 0.882, indicating good internal consistency.
2) Item-total correlations ranged from 0.039 to 0.614, with most items moderately correlated with the total scale score.
3) Removing any individual item would not significantly increase the overall Cronbach's alpha coefficient, suggesting all 30 items are measuring the intended underlying construct.
The document reports the results of a reliability analysis on a 30-item scale called Versi Analyze Scale. It found:
1) The Cronbach's alpha coefficient for the 30 items was 0.882, indicating good internal consistency.
2) Item-total correlations ranged from 0.039 to 0.614, with most items moderately correlated with the total scale score.
3) Removing any individual item would not significantly increase the overall Cronbach's alpha coefficient, suggesting all 30 items are measuring the intended underlying construct.
The document reports the results of a reliability analysis on a 30-item scale called Versi Analyze Scale. It found:
1) The Cronbach's alpha coefficient for the 30 items was 0.882, indicating good internal consistency.
2) Item-total correlations ranged from 0.039 to 0.614, with most items moderately correlated with the total scale score.
3) Removing any individual item would not significantly increase the overall Cronbach's alpha coefficient, suggesting all 30 items are measuring the intended underlying construct.