Testing two measures of subjective well-being amongst a sample of children in the Western Cape

Magister Artium - MA === Recent advancements in child well-being research have shown an increased interest in the importance of subjective well-being. The development of instruments and scales to measure subjective well-being among children and adolescents is in its infancy. Furthermore, there are f...

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Main Author: Noordien, Zorina
Other Authors: Savahl, Shazly
Language:en
Published: University of the Western Cape 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11394/4163
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uwc-oai-etd.uwc.ac.za-11394-41632017-08-02T04:00:47Z Testing two measures of subjective well-being amongst a sample of children in the Western Cape Noordien, Zorina Savahl, Shazly Subjective well-being Children Socio-economic status Confirmatory factor analysis Magister Artium - MA Recent advancements in child well-being research have shown an increased interest in the importance of subjective well-being. The development of instruments and scales to measure subjective well-being among children and adolescents is in its infancy. Furthermore, there are few existing cross-cultural studies with child and adolescent populations. Validation of existing measures and cross-cultural comparisons has been identified by a number of researchers as critical in contributing to the international dialogue. In the current study, two measures of subjective well-being (Student Life Satisfaction Scale and Personal Well-Being Index-School Children) are tested among a sample of children in the Western Cape region of South Africa. Noting the diversity of experience between children from different socio-economic status groups in South Africa, the study further aims to determine the extent to which the measures are comparable across socio-economic status groups. Data from the Children’s World Survey were used; and includes a sample of 1004 children randomly selected from 15 schools within the Cape Town Metropole. Confirmatory factor analysis was used to test the overall fit structure and multi-group factor analysis, with Scalar and Metric invariance constraints. The results show appropriate fit structure for the overall model, with Scalar and Metric factor invariance tenable across socio-economic status groups. The overall findings suggest that the two measures are appropriate for use with children from low and medium socio-economic status groups in the Western Cape province of South Africa. 2015-05-21T07:41:51Z 2015-05-21T07:41:51Z 2015 http://hdl.handle.net/11394/4163 en University of the Western Cape University of the Western Cape
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Subjective well-being
Children
Socio-economic status
Confirmatory factor analysis
spellingShingle Subjective well-being
Children
Socio-economic status
Confirmatory factor analysis
Noordien, Zorina
Testing two measures of subjective well-being amongst a sample of children in the Western Cape
description Magister Artium - MA === Recent advancements in child well-being research have shown an increased interest in the importance of subjective well-being. The development of instruments and scales to measure subjective well-being among children and adolescents is in its infancy. Furthermore, there are few existing cross-cultural studies with child and adolescent populations. Validation of existing measures and cross-cultural comparisons has been identified by a number of researchers as critical in contributing to the international dialogue. In the current study, two measures of subjective well-being (Student Life Satisfaction Scale and Personal Well-Being Index-School Children) are tested among a sample of children in the Western Cape region of South Africa. Noting the diversity of experience between children from different socio-economic status groups in South Africa, the study further aims to determine the extent to which the measures are comparable across socio-economic status groups. Data from the Children’s World Survey were used; and includes a sample of 1004 children randomly selected from 15 schools within the Cape Town Metropole. Confirmatory factor analysis was used to test the overall fit structure and multi-group factor analysis, with Scalar and Metric invariance constraints. The results show appropriate fit structure for the overall model, with Scalar and Metric factor invariance tenable across socio-economic status groups. The overall findings suggest that the two measures are appropriate for use with children from low and medium socio-economic status groups in the Western Cape province of South Africa.
author2 Savahl, Shazly
author_facet Savahl, Shazly
Noordien, Zorina
author Noordien, Zorina
author_sort Noordien, Zorina
title Testing two measures of subjective well-being amongst a sample of children in the Western Cape
title_short Testing two measures of subjective well-being amongst a sample of children in the Western Cape
title_full Testing two measures of subjective well-being amongst a sample of children in the Western Cape
title_fullStr Testing two measures of subjective well-being amongst a sample of children in the Western Cape
title_full_unstemmed Testing two measures of subjective well-being amongst a sample of children in the Western Cape
title_sort testing two measures of subjective well-being amongst a sample of children in the western cape
publisher University of the Western Cape
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/11394/4163
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