An evaluation of the psychometric properties of the strengths and difficulties scale in Turkey: implications for other non-WEIRD countries
Publication Date
2023
Advisor
Institution Author
Arıkan, Kübra
Co-Authors
Ruffman, Ted
Selcuk, Bilge
Yavus-Muren, H. Melis
Tuncay, Ipek
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher:
Wiley
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
The Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ) is a very widely used scale in which parents, teachers or the child rate various aspects of the child's well-being. It is widely used in the Western world and is translated into 80+ languages. It is also used in countries that do not classify as WEIRD (Western, educated, industrialized, rich and democratic). However, unlike WEIRD countries, some studies indicate that the psychometric properties of the SDQ when used in non-WEIRD countries are questionable. Therefore, we gave the SDQ to the mothers and teachers of 310 3- to 5-year-olds in urban centres of Turkey and examined its psychometric properties. Turkey is not a WEIRD country because it is not Western, although the participants in our study were well educated, living in an industrialized area, rich relative to others in Turkey (although poor relative to Westerners) and democratic. As such, it is not drastically different from WEIRD countries and our question was whether even relatively small deviations from standard WEIRD criteria could result in questionable psychometric properties for the SDQ.
Description
Subject
Psychology, developmental