The Academic Resilience Scale (ARS-30): A new multidimensional construct measure

Resilience is a psychological construct observed in some individuals that accounts for success despite adversity. Resilience reflects the ability to bounce back, to beat the odds and is considered an asset in human characteristic terms. Academic resilience contextualises the resilience construct a...

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Main Author: Simon Cassidy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2016-11-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01787/full
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spelling doaj-6e0aa7cf9b89456480a6e9d78de286382020-11-24T21:36:43ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782016-11-01710.3389/fpsyg.2016.01787222168The Academic Resilience Scale (ARS-30): A new multidimensional construct measureSimon Cassidy0University of SalfordResilience is a psychological construct observed in some individuals that accounts for success despite adversity. Resilience reflects the ability to bounce back, to beat the odds and is considered an asset in human characteristic terms. Academic resilience contextualises the resilience construct and reflects an increased likelihood of educational success despite adversity. The paper provides an account of the development of a new measure of academic resilience. The 30 item Academic Resilience Scale (ARS-30) explores process—as opposed to outcome—aspects of resilience, providing a new multidimensional construct measure of academic resilience based on students’ specific adaptive cognitive-affective and behavioural responses to academic adversity. Findings from the study involving a sample of undergraduate students (N=532) demonstrate that the ARS-30 has good internal reliability and construct validity. It is suggested that a measure such as the ARS-30, which is based on adaptive responses, aligns more closely with the conceptualisation of resilience and provides a valid construct measure of academic resilience relevant for research and practice in university student populations.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01787/fulladversityhigher educationresilienceuniversity studentsBounce backAcademic resilience
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Simon Cassidy
spellingShingle Simon Cassidy
The Academic Resilience Scale (ARS-30): A new multidimensional construct measure
Frontiers in Psychology
adversity
higher education
resilience
university students
Bounce back
Academic resilience
author_facet Simon Cassidy
author_sort Simon Cassidy
title The Academic Resilience Scale (ARS-30): A new multidimensional construct measure
title_short The Academic Resilience Scale (ARS-30): A new multidimensional construct measure
title_full The Academic Resilience Scale (ARS-30): A new multidimensional construct measure
title_fullStr The Academic Resilience Scale (ARS-30): A new multidimensional construct measure
title_full_unstemmed The Academic Resilience Scale (ARS-30): A new multidimensional construct measure
title_sort academic resilience scale (ars-30): a new multidimensional construct measure
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2016-11-01
description Resilience is a psychological construct observed in some individuals that accounts for success despite adversity. Resilience reflects the ability to bounce back, to beat the odds and is considered an asset in human characteristic terms. Academic resilience contextualises the resilience construct and reflects an increased likelihood of educational success despite adversity. The paper provides an account of the development of a new measure of academic resilience. The 30 item Academic Resilience Scale (ARS-30) explores process—as opposed to outcome—aspects of resilience, providing a new multidimensional construct measure of academic resilience based on students’ specific adaptive cognitive-affective and behavioural responses to academic adversity. Findings from the study involving a sample of undergraduate students (N=532) demonstrate that the ARS-30 has good internal reliability and construct validity. It is suggested that a measure such as the ARS-30, which is based on adaptive responses, aligns more closely with the conceptualisation of resilience and provides a valid construct measure of academic resilience relevant for research and practice in university student populations.
topic adversity
higher education
resilience
university students
Bounce back
Academic resilience
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01787/full
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