by Dayna Lee-Baggley, Hayam Bakour, Bill Howatt, Debra Gilin, Ehsan Etezad This research developed the Belonging at Work Scale (BWS), a 7-item, unidimensional measure of work group inclusion focusing specifically on belongingness. Collecting data from 2 Canadian employee samples across 2 studies ( N = 1535, N = 3148), we examined the factor structure, psychometric properties, and group means of the BWS across diverse groups of employees (gender, ethnicity, neurodiversity, sexual orientation).
The BWS showed strong reliability as well as configural, metric and scalar invariance across all diverse groups, indicating equivalent fit and applicability. An intersectionality analysis (Study 1) found that women in comparison to men, non-heterosexual individuals in comparison to heterosexual individuals, and participants in intersecting demographic minority groups report less belonging at work on average.
Additionally, a greater sense of belonging as measured by the BWS was associated with fewer reports of 10 harmful misbehaviours in the workplace as well as lower rates of taking leaves of absence (Study 2).
PLOS ONE (Medicine) published a clinical update in Research Highlights on 10 Apr 2026.
The item focuses on Development and validation of the belonging at work scale: Association with mistreatment and leaves.
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