Development and Validation of the Social Emotional Health Survey–Higher Education Version
Michael J. Furlong (),
Sukkyung You,
Mark Shishim and
Erin Dowdy
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Michael J. Furlong: University of California Santa Barbara
Sukkyung You: Hankuk University of Foreign Studies
Mark Shishim: University of California Santa Barbara
Erin Dowdy: University of California Santa Barbara
Applied Research in Quality of Life, 2017, vol. 12, issue 2, No 7, 343-367
Abstract:
Abstract We report on the development of the Social Emotional Health Survey-Higher Education (SEHS-HE), a multidimensional measure of covitality (the combinatorial effects of multiple positive psychological constructs). Scale development was carried out over 18 months involving five phases: conceptual grounding and item pool generation; cognitive interviews and item refinement; pilot survey and item reduction; structural validation survey and analyses; and, validity and stability analyses. Starting with a pool of 72 items, item selection and reduction was carried out using a sample of 771 college students. A second sample of 1,413 students (63.5 % female, mean age 20.0 years) completed the refined 48-item measure. Confirmatory factor analyses found acceptable fit for the SEHS-HE higher-order covitality latent structure. A final set of 36 items consisted of four latent traits (each comprised of three measured subscales): belief-in-self (subscales: self-efficacy, persistence, self-awareness), belief-in-others (subscales: family support, institutional support, peer support), emotional competence (subscales: cognitive reappraisal, empathy, self-regulation), and engaged living (subscales: gratitude, zest, optimism). Complete invariance was found for males and females with small effect size differences on latent mean scores. Evidence supported the SEHS-HE total score’s concurrent and predictive validity for students’ subjective well-being (r = .72, r = .65, respectively) and psychological distress (r = −.56, r = −.45, respectively). The 4-month stability coefficient for the SEHS-HE total score was .82, indicating it measures trait-like psychological constructs. The discussion focuses on the uses of the SEHS-HE in support of mental health programs, and refinement of the conceptual understanding of the covitality construct.
Keywords: Covitality; College students; Social emotional health; Well-being; Social Emotional Health Survey-Higher Education (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2017
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (3)
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spr:ariqol:v:12:y:2017:i:2:d:10.1007_s11482-016-9464-9
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DOI: 10.1007/s11482-016-9464-9
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