The Devereux Student Strengths Assessment Mini (DESSA-Mini) (LeBuffe, Shapiro, &
Naglieri, 2014) efficiently monitors the growth of Social-Emotional Competence (SEC)
in the routine implementation of Social Emotional Learning programs. The DESSAMini
is used to assess approximately half a million children around the world. Since
behavior rating scales can have ‘rater bias’, this paper examines rater characteristics that
contribute to DESSA-Mini ratings. Rater characteristics and DESSA-Mini ratings were
collected from elementary school classroom teachers (n=72) implementing TOOLBOX
in a racially/ethnically diverse California school district. Teachers rated 1,676 students,
who scored similarly to a national reference group. Multilevel modeling analysis showed
that only 16% of variance in DESSA-mini ratings was attributable to raters.
Relationships between teacher characteristics and ratings were estimated to examine
rater variance. Collectively, four characteristics of teachers (perceived barriers to student
learning, sense of their ‘typical’ student’s level of SEC, anticipation of SEL program
implementation challenges, and intentions to fully implement a newly adopted SEL
program) accounted for bias in teacher-generated DESSA scores, leaving only 10% of
the variance unexplained. Identified sources of ‘rater bias’ can be controlled for in
research and addressed through thoughtful program selection, training, and
implementation.peer-reviewe