Measuring School-Related Stressors in Adolescents |
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Authors: | Burnett Paul C. Fanshawe John P. |
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Affiliation: | (1) Research Methods and Director of the Centre for Cognitive Processes in Learning within the School of Learning and Development, Queensland University of Technology, Kelvin Grove Campus, Kelvin Grove, 4059, Australia;(2) Human Development and Educational Psychology, School of Learning and Development, Queensland University of Technology, Kelvin Grove Campus, Kelvin Grove, 4059, Australia |
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Abstract: | ![]() Some 1620 high school students responded to 68 items that measure adolescent stressors. Thirty-five of the items were based on J. P. Kohn and G. H. Frazer's Academic Stress Scale [1(1986) An Academic Stress Scale: Identification and Rated Importance of Academic Stressors, Psychological Reports, Vol. 59, pp. 415–426] developed in the United States, while the remaining 33 items were developed from P. Strutynski's [(1985) A Survey of Queensland Year 10, 11 and 12 Student Attitudes to Schools and Schooling, State Planning Committee, International Youth Year, Brisbane] lists of the most frequently named problems of 2336 Australian high school students. Confirmatory Factor Analysis was used to test and develop a measurement model developed from an extensive review of previous scales. The High School Stressors Scale emerged from the analytic process and measures nine school-related stressors. For researchers focusing on school-related problems and stressors among adolescents, the HSSS promises to be a very useful instrument. It has sound construct and predictive validity and adequate reliability, as demonstrated by the goodness-of-fit indices the squared multiple correlations. |
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