Adaptation Studies of the Aggression and Victimization Scales for Elementary School Children

Objective: Recent studies emphasize the importance of evaluation for relational /social behaviors (e.g., rejection,) as well as overt behaviors (e.g., hitting) in the assessment of peer aggression and victimization among school children. For this reason the present study aimed to evaluate the applic...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Arzu KURNAZ, Emine Gül KAPÇI
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Kare Publishing 2013-08-01
Series:Bilişsel Davranışçı Psikoterapi ve Araştırmalar Dergisi
Subjects:
Online Access:http://77-1380828915.pdf
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832544503408361472
author Arzu KURNAZ
Emine Gül KAPÇI
author_facet Arzu KURNAZ
Emine Gül KAPÇI
author_sort Arzu KURNAZ
collection DOAJ
description Objective: Recent studies emphasize the importance of evaluation for relational /social behaviors (e.g., rejection,) as well as overt behaviors (e.g., hitting) in the assessment of peer aggression and victimization among school children. For this reason the present study aimed to evaluate the applicability of the two scales, namely Children&#146;s Social Behavior Scale- Self Report -CSBS-SR (Crick & Grotpeter, 1995) and Children&#146;s Self Experience Questionnaire-Self Report -CSEQ-SR (Crick & Grotpeter, 1996) for Turkish Elementary school children. CSBS-SR and CSEQ-SR include overt and relational dimensions of peer aggression and victimization respectively. Methods: A representative sample consisting of a total of 422 (boys n=205; girls n=207) and 415 children (n=210; girls n=205) attending public and private elementary schools in Ankara were recruited for the validity and reliability studies of the CSBS-SR and CSEQ-SR respectively. The Revised Olweus Bully/Victim Questionnaire (ROBVQ; Olweus, 1996) were utilized for the criterion validity. Results: Confirmatory factor analyses indicated that the five factor model suggested for the CSBS-SR and three factor model for the CSEQ-SR met the criteria standards for adequacy of fit. A moderate correlation of the CSBS-SR with ROBVQ-Bully Subscale (r=.47) and moderate to high correlation of the CSEQ-SR with ROBVQ-Victim Subscale (r=.70) supported both scale&#146;s criterion validitiy. CSBS-SR&#146;s and CSEQ-SR&#146;s test-retest reliability were found to be .64 and .80 and internal consistency assessed by Cronbach Alpha were found to be .84 and .90 respectively. T-test analyses for independent groups demonstrated that boys had higher mean scores for overt aggression than girls (t(423)=3.025, p<.05). On the other hand girls had higher mean scores for relational victimization than boys (t(413)=3.213, p<.01). There were significant positive correlation of mean relational aggression scores with fathers&#146; education (r=.14) and family income (r=.15). Additionally overt and relational victimization mean scores were found to have negative correlation with parental education (relational victimization for both mothers and fathers r=-.16; overt victimization for mothers r=-.16 and fathers r=-.18) and family income (for overt and relational victimization and r=-.14 and r=-.15 respectively). Finally relational victimation were found to correlate neagatively with age (r=-.09). Conclusion: CSBS-SR and CSEQ-SR had acceptable validity and reliability properties. As relational aggression and victimization were found to be related with several mental health problems among school children, both scales could be utilized in the evaluation of overt and relational dimensions of both agression and victimization among Turkish elementary school children. (Journal of Cognitive Behavioral Psychotherapy and Research 2013, 2: 106-115 [JCBPR 2013; 2(2.000): 106-115]
format Article
id doaj-art-afb59b6779394ee18b28f03d0c867f2e
institution Kabale University
issn 2146-9490
language English
publishDate 2013-08-01
publisher Kare Publishing
record_format Article
series Bilişsel Davranışçı Psikoterapi ve Araştırmalar Dergisi
spelling doaj-art-afb59b6779394ee18b28f03d0c867f2e2025-02-03T10:15:46ZengKare PublishingBilişsel Davranışçı Psikoterapi ve Araştırmalar Dergisi2146-94902013-08-012210611545374Adaptation Studies of the Aggression and Victimization Scales for Elementary School ChildrenArzu KURNAZEmine G&uuml;l KAP&Ccedil;IObjective: Recent studies emphasize the importance of evaluation for relational /social behaviors (e.g., rejection,) as well as overt behaviors (e.g., hitting) in the assessment of peer aggression and victimization among school children. For this reason the present study aimed to evaluate the applicability of the two scales, namely Children&#146;s Social Behavior Scale- Self Report -CSBS-SR (Crick & Grotpeter, 1995) and Children&#146;s Self Experience Questionnaire-Self Report -CSEQ-SR (Crick & Grotpeter, 1996) for Turkish Elementary school children. CSBS-SR and CSEQ-SR include overt and relational dimensions of peer aggression and victimization respectively. Methods: A representative sample consisting of a total of 422 (boys n=205; girls n=207) and 415 children (n=210; girls n=205) attending public and private elementary schools in Ankara were recruited for the validity and reliability studies of the CSBS-SR and CSEQ-SR respectively. The Revised Olweus Bully/Victim Questionnaire (ROBVQ; Olweus, 1996) were utilized for the criterion validity. Results: Confirmatory factor analyses indicated that the five factor model suggested for the CSBS-SR and three factor model for the CSEQ-SR met the criteria standards for adequacy of fit. A moderate correlation of the CSBS-SR with ROBVQ-Bully Subscale (r=.47) and moderate to high correlation of the CSEQ-SR with ROBVQ-Victim Subscale (r=.70) supported both scale&#146;s criterion validitiy. CSBS-SR&#146;s and CSEQ-SR&#146;s test-retest reliability were found to be .64 and .80 and internal consistency assessed by Cronbach Alpha were found to be .84 and .90 respectively. T-test analyses for independent groups demonstrated that boys had higher mean scores for overt aggression than girls (t(423)=3.025, p<.05). On the other hand girls had higher mean scores for relational victimization than boys (t(413)=3.213, p<.01). There were significant positive correlation of mean relational aggression scores with fathers&#146; education (r=.14) and family income (r=.15). Additionally overt and relational victimization mean scores were found to have negative correlation with parental education (relational victimization for both mothers and fathers r=-.16; overt victimization for mothers r=-.16 and fathers r=-.18) and family income (for overt and relational victimization and r=-.14 and r=-.15 respectively). Finally relational victimation were found to correlate neagatively with age (r=-.09). Conclusion: CSBS-SR and CSEQ-SR had acceptable validity and reliability properties. As relational aggression and victimization were found to be related with several mental health problems among school children, both scales could be utilized in the evaluation of overt and relational dimensions of both agression and victimization among Turkish elementary school children. (Journal of Cognitive Behavioral Psychotherapy and Research 2013, 2: 106-115 [JCBPR 2013; 2(2.000): 106-115]77-1380828915.pdfAssaultive behaviorviolencechildscalereliabilityvalidity
spellingShingle Arzu KURNAZ
Emine G&uuml;l KAP&Ccedil;I
Adaptation Studies of the Aggression and Victimization Scales for Elementary School Children
Bilişsel Davranışçı Psikoterapi ve Araştırmalar Dergisi
Assaultive behavior
violence
child
scale
reliability
validity
title Adaptation Studies of the Aggression and Victimization Scales for Elementary School Children
title_full Adaptation Studies of the Aggression and Victimization Scales for Elementary School Children
title_fullStr Adaptation Studies of the Aggression and Victimization Scales for Elementary School Children
title_full_unstemmed Adaptation Studies of the Aggression and Victimization Scales for Elementary School Children
title_short Adaptation Studies of the Aggression and Victimization Scales for Elementary School Children
title_sort adaptation studies of the aggression and victimization scales for elementary school children
topic Assaultive behavior
violence
child
scale
reliability
validity
url http://77-1380828915.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT arzukurnaz adaptationstudiesoftheaggressionandvictimizationscalesforelementaryschoolchildren
AT emineguumllkapccedili adaptationstudiesoftheaggressionandvictimizationscalesforelementaryschoolchildren