Measurement invariance of TGMD-3 in children with and without mental and behavioral disorders
Measurement invariance of TGMD-3 in children with and without mental and behavioral disorders
This study evaluated whether the Test of Gross Motor Development 3 (TGMD-3) is a reliable tool to compare children with and without mental and behavioral disorders across gross motor skill domains. A total of 1,075 children (aged 3-11 years), 98 with mental and behavioral disorders and 977 without (typically developing), were included in the analyses. The TGMD-3 evaluates fundamental gross motor skills of children across two domains: Locomotor skills and ball skills. Two independent testers simultaneously observed children's performances (agreement over 95%). Each child completed one practice and then two formal trials. Scores were recorded only during the two formal trials. Multigroup confirmatory factor analysis tested the assumption of TGMD-3 measurement invariance across disability groups. According to the magnitude of changes in root mean square error of approximation and comparative fit index between nested models, the assumption of measurement invariance across groups was valid. Loadings of the manifest indicators on locomotor and ball skills were significant (p < .001) in both groups. Item response theory analysis showed good reliability results across locomotor and the ball skills full latent traits. The present study confirmed the factorial structure of TGMD-3 and demonstrated its feasibility across normally developing children and children with mental and behavioral disorders. These findings provide new opportunities for understanding the effect of specific intervention strategies on this population.
Item response theory, Motor development, Motor skills, Multigroup analysis, TGMD-3
1421-1429
Magistro, Daniele
ab9296bc-fda6-469e-a3f8-3a574faa1b7e
Piumatti, Giovanni
387e8c60-34d5-45ed-b607-3d698e5764d7
Carlevaro, Fabio
64db4e9a-72d3-4948-b2c2-c54d85f27528
Sherar, Lauren B.
490eb93a-b4dd-4502-a55b-8e0a08000aa8
Esliger, Dale W.
64ac250c-aa27-417f-8006-986cf4bdde88
Bardaglio, Giulia
06138b4e-c4c3-450c-b55a-13cd75ead0bf
Magno, Francesca
87ecfc99-275f-49a9-9681-36ed9671fdbf
Zecca, Massimiliano
870c8b27-684b-42b3-baed-40dd996c2800
Musella, Giovanni
64815766-6903-48c2-ac34-68eb3bbe7a43
November 2018
Magistro, Daniele
ab9296bc-fda6-469e-a3f8-3a574faa1b7e
Piumatti, Giovanni
387e8c60-34d5-45ed-b607-3d698e5764d7
Carlevaro, Fabio
64db4e9a-72d3-4948-b2c2-c54d85f27528
Sherar, Lauren B.
490eb93a-b4dd-4502-a55b-8e0a08000aa8
Esliger, Dale W.
64ac250c-aa27-417f-8006-986cf4bdde88
Bardaglio, Giulia
06138b4e-c4c3-450c-b55a-13cd75ead0bf
Magno, Francesca
87ecfc99-275f-49a9-9681-36ed9671fdbf
Zecca, Massimiliano
870c8b27-684b-42b3-baed-40dd996c2800
Musella, Giovanni
64815766-6903-48c2-ac34-68eb3bbe7a43
Magistro, Daniele, Piumatti, Giovanni, Carlevaro, Fabio, Sherar, Lauren B., Esliger, Dale W., Bardaglio, Giulia, Magno, Francesca, Zecca, Massimiliano and Musella, Giovanni
(2018)
Measurement invariance of TGMD-3 in children with and without mental and behavioral disorders.
Psychological Assessment, 30 (11), .
(doi:10.1037/pas0000587).
Abstract
This study evaluated whether the Test of Gross Motor Development 3 (TGMD-3) is a reliable tool to compare children with and without mental and behavioral disorders across gross motor skill domains. A total of 1,075 children (aged 3-11 years), 98 with mental and behavioral disorders and 977 without (typically developing), were included in the analyses. The TGMD-3 evaluates fundamental gross motor skills of children across two domains: Locomotor skills and ball skills. Two independent testers simultaneously observed children's performances (agreement over 95%). Each child completed one practice and then two formal trials. Scores were recorded only during the two formal trials. Multigroup confirmatory factor analysis tested the assumption of TGMD-3 measurement invariance across disability groups. According to the magnitude of changes in root mean square error of approximation and comparative fit index between nested models, the assumption of measurement invariance across groups was valid. Loadings of the manifest indicators on locomotor and ball skills were significant (p < .001) in both groups. Item response theory analysis showed good reliability results across locomotor and the ball skills full latent traits. The present study confirmed the factorial structure of TGMD-3 and demonstrated its feasibility across normally developing children and children with mental and behavioral disorders. These findings provide new opportunities for understanding the effect of specific intervention strategies on this population.
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Published date: November 2018
Keywords:
Item response theory, Motor development, Motor skills, Multigroup analysis, TGMD-3
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 510620
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/510620
ISSN: 1040-3590
PURE UUID: c5b86a0e-f021-4ec6-bdd0-1f7fedd429c2
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Date deposited: 14 Apr 2026 16:43
Last modified: 16 Apr 2026 02:18
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Contributors
Author:
Daniele Magistro
Author:
Giovanni Piumatti
Author:
Fabio Carlevaro
Author:
Lauren B. Sherar
Author:
Dale W. Esliger
Author:
Giulia Bardaglio
Author:
Francesca Magno
Author:
Massimiliano Zecca
Author:
Giovanni Musella
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