| Literature DB >> 35813349 |
Sergiy Bogdanov1, Andriy Girnyk2, Vira Chernobrovkina2, Volodymir Chernobrovkin2, Olexander Vinogradov3, Kateryna Garbar1, Yuliya Kovalevskaya1, Oksana Basenko1, Irina Ivanyuk1, Kimberly Hook4,5,6, Mike Wessells7.
Abstract
Psychosocial support in education that is provided during emergencies frequently aims to support children's resilience, but strong, contextual measures of resilience are in short supply in Eastern Europe. In this article, our aim is to describe the development and psychometric properties of the first measure of resilience for war-affected adolescents in Eastern Ukraine. We used qualitative methods to identify the main cultural characteristics of resiliency and then used these constructs to develop the measure. We used exploratory structural equation modeling to extract five factors that showed high internal consistency: family support (ω=0.89), optimism (ω=0.87), persistence (ω=0.87), health (ω=0.86), and social networking (ω=0.87). Confirmatory factor analysis suggested that a concise model of resiliency fit the data almost as well as the exploratory structural equation modeling model. The measure demonstrated good test-retest reliability. In this article, we also discuss the importance of development, validation, and the use of culturally relevant measures of resilience for strengthening psychosocial support programs in schools, particularly in Ukraine.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 35813349 PMCID: PMC9269487 DOI: 10.33682/wxrd-x8fq
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Educ Emerg ISSN: 2518-6833