Introduction:
Adaptive performance is defined as an employee’s ability to deal with changes and new and unusual situations
in the workplace. The present study
mainly focused on factor analysis of the Adaptive Performance Scale (APS) and
determining its validity and reliability. Adaptive
performance is a multi-dimensional
structure with five
latent factors.
Materials and Methods: This method
validation study was conducted in Ahvaz, Iran. 210 randomly selected
public hospital nurses completed the Persian version of the APS. Exploratory factor analysis (varimax rotation) was used to explore the
factor structure of the scale. Confirmatory factor analysis and structural equation modeling were applied
to fit the model.
Results: The
overall reliability of the APS was confirmed (Cronbach’s alpha = 0.89). Factor
analysis was used to evaluate the factor structure of the scale. Kaiser-Meyer-Olkin index (0.88) and
Bartlett's sphericity test result (1639.093) were both significant.
Finally, varimax rotation showed all items to have significant factor loadings.
Conclusion: Our findings
confirmed the acceptable psychometric properties (reliability
and validity) of the APS for administration among nurses. Therefore, the
adaptive performance construct contains five distinct dimensions, namely dealing with emergency and
unexpected situations, work stress
management, creative problem solving,
learning, and interpersonal adaptability. These results are consistent
with previous studies.