Multiphasic Development and Validation of the Psychosocial Strengths Inventory for Children and Adolescents-Short Form (PSICA-SF)

被引:0
作者
Hynes, William T. [1 ]
Peer, Samuel O. [1 ]
Korell, Alyssa M. [2 ]
机构
[1] Idaho State Univ, Dept Psychol, 921 S 8th Ave, Stop 8112, Pocatello, ID 83209 USA
[2] Child Hlth & Dev Inst, 270 Farmington Ave 367, Farmington, CT 06032 USA
关键词
Psychosocial competencies; PSICA; Short form; Psychometrics; Pragmatics; SOCIAL-EMOTIONAL DEVELOPMENT; MENTAL-HEALTH PROBLEMS; DIFFICULTIES QUESTIONNAIRE; ASSESSMENT ITSEA; MECHANICAL TURK; COMPETENCE; CARE; PATHWAYS; PSYCHOPATHOLOGY; RELIABILITY;
D O I
10.1007/s10826-024-02785-3
中图分类号
D669 [社会生活与社会问题]; C913 [社会生活与社会问题];
学科分类号
1204 ;
摘要
Despite ample research demonstrating the developmental and clinical importance of psychosocial competencies (e.g., prosociality, attention regulation, compliance to caregivers) in early childhood, few measures exist that are clinically relevant, developmentally appropriate, psychometrically validated, and pragmatic to administer, score, and interpret. One promising option is the Psychosocial Strengths Inventory for Children and Adolescents (PSICA), a parent-report measure of affective, attentional, and social competencies in youth. Although the PSICA has growing psychometric support, it remains a relatively lengthy measure (i.e., 36 items). Thus, we sampled 865 community caregivers (75% White, 59% mothers) of children ages 2-10 (72% White, 55% boys) to empirically develop and validate the PSICA-Short Form (PSICA-SF). Items were winnowed based on best-practice internal and external criteria (i.e., structural validity, convergent validity, internal consistency, and item-response discrimination indices), then further assessed for judgmental validity via quantitative survey completed by a snowball sample of 18 early childhood experts. These methods identified a 9-item version of the PSICA-SF, which retained the original PSICA's trichotomous structure and related subscales (i.e., Prosociality, Compliance, Attention), good internal consistency, face validity, and convergent validity. Collectively, these findings support the PSICA-SF as a more pragmatic, while equally psychometrically sound, multidimensional measure of child psychosocial competence that might be used for relevant child screening, case conceptualization, progress monitoring, and program evaluation. We empirically winnowed the Psychosocial Strengths Inventory for Children and Adolescents (PSICA), a multidimensional caregiver-report measure of child psychosocial competencies (i.e., prosociality, compliance, attention), to develop a short form of the PSICA (i.e., PSICA-SF).The PSICA-SF is a 9-item, free measure which reduces assessment burdens (e.g., administration and scoring) of families, clinicians, and researchers.Our results provisionally indicate the 9-item PSICA-SF has equivalent psychometric properties to the original 36-item PSICA (i.e., good-to-excellent internal consistency, face validity, convergent validity, and structural validity).Initial findings suggest the PSICA-SF is a more pragmatic, yet psychometrically sound measure of child psychosocial competence that might be used for relevant child screening, case conceptualization, treatment progress monitoring, and program evaluation.
引用
收藏
页码:1266 / 1279
页数:14
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