Back to Top

Paper Title

A Dispositional and Situational Assessment of Children's Coping: Testing Alternative Models of Coping

Keywords

  • Children's Coping
  • Dispositional Coping
  • Situational Coping
  • Coping Models
  • Psychometric Assessment
  • Confirmatory Factor Analysis (CFA)
  • Four-Factor Model
  • Active Coping
  • Distraction Coping
  • Avoidant Coping
  • Support Seeking
  • Coping Measurement
  • Age Invariance
  • Gender Invariance
  • Coping Subscales
  • Coping Dimensions
  • Coping Strategies
  • Psychological Assessment
  • Model Comparison

Article Type

Research Article

Research Impact Tools

Issue

Volume : 64 | Issue : 4 | Page No : 923-958

Published On

December, 1996

Downloads

Abstract

Dispositional and situational measures of children's coping were developed using a theoretically based approach. Two studies (N1 = 217; N2 = 303) assessed the psychometric characteristics of these measures in fourth- through sixth-grade children. Confirmatory factor analyses indicated that a four-factor model of dispositional coping (active, distraction, avoidant, and support seeking) provided a better fit to the data than either the problemversus emotion-focused (Lazarus & Folkman, 1984) or passive versus active (Billings & Moos, 1981) coping models. The four-factor model was largely invariant with respect to age and gender. Moderate to high correlations were found between the parallel subscales of the dispositional and situational measures of coping. Although the four factor structures of the dispositional and situational measures were generally similar, factor loadings and correlations between dimensions were not equivalent.

View more >>

Uploded Document Preview