| Literature DB >> 27247692 |
Spiridon Kamtsios1, Evangelia Karagiannopoulou2.
Abstract
The purpose of the study was to establish the reliability, the structural and the convergent validity of the "Dimensions of Academic Hardiness Questionnaire" for late elementary school children. A sample of children (N = 1264) aged 10-12 years completed the questionnaire and the "Athens Coping Scale". Multiple fit indices provided support that the 9-factor model had a good fit to the data. Reliability coefficients ranged from .68 to .83. The study provided also preliminary evidence of convergent validity of the "Dimensions of Academic Hardiness" scores with one theoretically related measure, the "Athens Coping Scale". The results enrich the notion of Academic Hardiness in late elementary school children as the role of awareness and the role of children's previous experiences has been distinguished. The relation between the "Dimensions of Academic Hardiness" and achievement goal orientations in children learning is also noted. These findings are discussed in the context of the relevant literature.Entities:
Keywords: academic hardiness; convergent validity; elementary school children; validation
Year: 2016 PMID: 27247692 PMCID: PMC4873066 DOI: 10.5964/ejop.v12i1.997
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Psychol ISSN: 1841-0413
Factors of the “Dimensions of Academic Hardiness Questionnaire” for Late Elementary School Children, Description, Number of Items and Example Items
| No | Factor | Description | Number of items | Example item |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Commitment: | Indicate children’s commitment-comparison and acceptance by schoolmates. | 4 | “I do my best at school so as my marks to be higher than those of my classmates” |
| 2 | Control-awareness: | Effectiveness of different strategies in order for the children to achieve mastery orientation goals | 6 | “When my performance at school is not good, I try to find ways to face the problem” |
| 3 | Commitment: | Items mentioned that children can recognize what have value and importance for other individuals and be commitment to achieve them | 4 | “I do my best at schoolwork to prove to my parents that I can make it” |
| 4 | Commitment: | Children’s commitment to study further recognizing the usefulness of knowledge the next years of school life | 5 | “I believe that everything taught and learnt at school now can be also used in both secondary and high school” |
| 5 | Control-awareness: | Children’s control and awareness for effort with regard to avoid the unpleasant feelings after a school failure | 5 | “I try not to get a low mark to avoid feeling disappointment and shame” |
| 6 | Commitment: | Children’s priority of learning and commitment to academic tasks and time management. | 3 | “I try to finish my homework first before I spend time with my friends” |
| 7 | Challenge: | Failure is perceived as an experience that leads them to put more effort on study | 3 | “I find interest in my school subjects even though they may be difficult” |
| 8 | Commitment: | Children’s attitude to seek support when they face difficulties or when they do not accomplish well with the school lessons | 3 | “When I have difficulties with my schoolwork I ask for my parents’ help” |
| 9 | Challenge: | Children’s attitude to insist on their effort even if they meet difficulties (e.g. low grade) in the learning process | 3 | “Getting a low mark makes me try harder in order to get a higher one the next time” |
Factor Loadings and Error Variances of the “Dimensions of Academic Hardiness Questionnaire” for Late Elementary School Children
| No | Item | Factor | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | ||
| 1 | I do my best at school so as my marks to be higher than those of my classmates. | .81 (.58) | ||||||||
| 2 | I do my best at schoolwork because I want not only to get a good mark but also to be among the best pupils of my class. | .82 (.57) | ||||||||
| 3 | I do my best at school in order to achieve the marks I want and to be better than my schoolmates | .73 (.68) | ||||||||
| 4 | I try to have good marks because I don’t want my friends to make fun of me. | .63 (.77) | ||||||||
| 5 | When I get a low mark I try to "unblock" and think rationally. | .49 (.87) | ||||||||
| 6 | When my performance at school in not good, I try to find ways to face the problem. | .45 (.89) | ||||||||
| 7 | Getting a low mark is something unpleasant, but I believe that if I try a lot I can make it. | .59 (.79) | ||||||||
| 8 | I try not only to calm down, when my performance at school is not so satisfying, but also to think about what I can do to improve it. | .60 (.79) | ||||||||
| 9 | I try to calm down and realize what went wrong in order to do something about that. | .57 (.81) | ||||||||
| 10 | If I get a low mark, I try to do something, in order to forget about what happened for a while before I make a decision about my next step. | .37 (.92) | ||||||||
| 11 | I do care about getting a good mark in order to make my parents feel pleased/satisfied. | .69 (.71) | ||||||||
| 12 | I do my best at schoolwork to prove to my parents that I can make it. | .73 (.67) | ||||||||
| 13 | Through my good performance I can prove to my teacher that I can make it at school. | .63 (.77) | ||||||||
| 14 | Having in mind that a possible failure in a test can disappoint my teacher, I do my best to avoid it. | .63 (.77) | ||||||||
| 15 | I try to be really attentive to my schoolwork as some of the subjects taught may be handful/useful later in my life. | .59 (.80) | ||||||||
| 16 | I believe that everything taught and learnt at school now can also be used in both secondary and high school. | .52 (.85) | ||||||||
| 17 | It is very important for me personally to get a good mark. | .52 (.85) | ||||||||
| 18 | I study my lessons carefully/thoroughly because the knowledge acquired can benefit my life in the long term. | .57 (.81) | ||||||||
| 19 | I make an effort for all lessons. All lessons taught can help me in my future life | .48 (.87) | ||||||||
| 20 | My concern about my parents’ potential reaction to a low mark makes me try harder | .55 (.83) | ||||||||
| 21 | My concern about my teacher’s reaction to a possible failure makes me study more | .60 (.80) | ||||||||
| 22 | I try not to get a low mark to avoid feeling disappointment and shame | .53 (.84) | ||||||||
| 23 | I do my homework because, if I get a low mark, I may feel bad/unpleasant | .62 (.78) | ||||||||
| 24 | A low mark makes me feel sad but if I study more, this is not going to happen again | .42 (.90) | ||||||||
| 25 | I spend time in after school activities (e.g. playing out with my friends) only after I have finished my school homework | .61 (.78) | ||||||||
| 26 | I try to finish my homework first before I spend time with my friends | .63 (.76) | ||||||||
| 27 | I do my homework first and then I play with my friends | .63 (.77) | ||||||||
| 28 | I find interest in my school subjects even though they may be difficult | .67 (.73) | ||||||||
| 29 | I find interest in the content even of those lessons considered as difficult | .67 (.72) | ||||||||
| 30 | I try my best, even at the difficult subjects/lessons, through daily revisions | .53 (.84) | ||||||||
| 31 | When I have difficulties with my schoolwork I ask for my parents’ help | .77 (.63) | ||||||||
| 32 | I ask for my parents’ help when I have questions/difficulties | .73 (.65) | ||||||||
| 33 | When I have difficulties, I prefer asking for an adult’s help | .63 (.77) | ||||||||
| 34 | I don’t feel disappointed when I get a low mark. On the contrary I try harder to improve myself | .60 (.79) | ||||||||
| 35 | Failing a test doesn’t disappoint me, but it makes me try harder | .69 (.72) | ||||||||
| 36 | Getting a low mark makes me try harder in order to get a higher one the next time | .52 (.85) | ||||||||
Note. Values in parentheses are error variances.
Number of Items, Means and % of Total Variance, Cronbach's α and Split-Half of the “Dimensions of Academic Hardiness Questionnaire” for Late Elementary School Children - Correlations Between the Factors
| No | Factor | Number of items | % of total variance | Cronbach's α | Split-half | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Commitment: comparing oneself with peers and acceptance from peers | 4 | 2.93 (.68) | 7.3 | .83 | .81 | .20** | .59** | .18* | .45** | .15* | .20** | .27** | .07 | |
| 2 | Control-awareness: use of effective coping strategies | 6 | 3.21 (.42) | 7.1 | .74 | .70 | .33** | .56** | .45** | .41** | .43** | .16* | .46** | ||
| 3 | Commitment: adults’ acceptance | 4 | 3.15 (.50) | 6.3 | .75 | .72 | .31** | .54** | .24** | .30** | .24** | .16* | |||
| 4 | Commitment: knowledge utility | 5 | 3.64 (.44) | 6.3 | .74 | .73 | .42** | .49** | .47** | .21** | .42** | ||||
| 5 | Control-awareness: attempt to avoid unpleasant feelings | 5 | 3.20 (.34) | 6.1 | .70 | .69 | .27** | .36** | .23** | .25** | |||||
| 6 | Commitment: regulating priority to learning vs. enjoyment | 3 | 3.45 (.63) | 5.9 | .68 | .62 | .41** | .16** | .38** | ||||||
| 7 | Challenge: dealing positively with hard subjects | 3 | 3.15 (.30) | 5.5 | .66 | .57 | .16* | .39** | |||||||
| 8 | Commitment: looking for help contributing to learning | 3 | 3.05 (.42) | 5.3 | .77 | .66 | .12* | ||||||||
| 9 | Challenge: dealing with failure in a constructive way | 3 | 3.30 (.40) | 4.6 | .64 | .59 |
*p < .05. **p < .01.
Figure 1Correlations between the “Dimensions of Academic Hardiness Questionnaire” for late elementary school children and coping styles (approach and avoidance).
*p < .05.
Correlations Between the 9 Factors of the “Dimensions of Academic Hardiness Questionnaire” and the Coping Styles
| No | Factor | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Commitment: comparing oneself with peers and acceptance from peers | .14** | .57** | .13* | .43** | .10* | .15** | .20** | .03 | .01 | .09 | .20** | .06 | .07 | -.03 | .09 | |
| 2 | Control-awareness: use of effective coping strategies | .32** | .55** | .51** | .36** | .46** | .11** | .51** | .14** | .12* | -.08 | .20** | .05 | .14* | .36** | ||
| 3 | Commitment: adults' acceptance | .26** | .60** | .16** | .25** | .19** | .14** | -.005 | .09 | .13* | .08 | .09 | .002 | .16* | |||
| 4 | Commitment: knowledge utility | .47** | .42** | .44** | .16* | .44** | .17* | -.04 | -.14** | .19** | -.04 | .08 | .31** | ||||
| 5 | Control-awareness: attempt to avoid unpleasant feelings | .27** | .37** | .15** | .28** | .007 | .03 | .08 | .22** | .06 | .05 | .30** | |||||
| 6 | Commitment: regulating priority to learning vs enjoyment | .34** | .07 | .30** | .09 | -.01 | -.10* | .13** | -.03 | .04 | .24** | ||||||
| 7 | Challenge: dealing positively with hard subjects | .08 | .38** | .15* | -.02 | -.06 | .12* | .06 | .11* | .22** | |||||||
| 8 | Commitment: looking for help contributing to learning | .02 | .34** | .08 | .03 | .11 | .05 | .15** | .12** | ||||||||
| 9 | Challenge: dealing with failure in a constructive way | .14* | -.04 | .-17** | .07 | .-09 | .08 | .26** | |||||||||
| 10 | Family support | 19* | .-02 | .31** | .15** | .43** | .39** | ||||||||||
| 11 | Avoidance | .39** | .15** | .23** | .28** | .22** | |||||||||||
| 12 | Giving up | .009 | .32** | .16* | .-08 | ||||||||||||
| 13 | Problem solving | .25** | .25** | .44** | |||||||||||||
| 14 | Isolation | .34** | .12* | ||||||||||||||
| 15 | Assistance keeping | .29** | |||||||||||||||
| 16 | Revision-reorganization |
*p < .05. **p < .01.
One-Way ANOVAs’ Results for the Relation Between Different Scores of the Dimensions of Academic Hardiness and Coping Strategies.
| Coping strategy | Dimensions of Academic Hardiness | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low | Medium | High | |||
| Family support | 2.89 (.84) | 2.97 (.80) | 3.04 (.80) | 1.228 | .294 |
| Avoidance | 2.40 (.65) | 2.42 (.68) | 2.55 (.64) | 1.459 | .234 |
| Giving up | 1.79 (.56) | 1.86 (.47) | 1.87 (.58) | .871 | .420 |
| Problem solving | 3.03 (.58) | 3.11 (.47) | 3.31 (.89) | 5.967* | .003 |
| Isolation | 1.85 (.64) | 1.79 (.54) | 1.98 (.67) | 2.222 | .110 |
| Assistance seeking | 2.35 (.68) | 2.37 (.67) | 2.50 (.79) | 1.240 | .291 |
| Revision-reorganization | 3.17 (.63) | 3.33 (.49) | 3.53 (.45) | 3.254* | .000 |
Figure 2Second order factor analysis results.