Go Back Research Article October, 1996

Appraisals of Negative Events by Preadolescent Children of Divorce

Abstract

This study investigated the appraisals of the significance of negative events made by 256 preadolescent children of divorce. Appraisals were assessed by a 24-item self-report scale. Confirmatory factor analysis of this scale found support for a 3-dimensional model: negative self-appraisal, negative other-appraisal, and material loss. Differentiation between the dimensions of appraisal increased with age in both cross-sectional and over-time data. Evidence for convergent and discriminant validity of the self-report measure of appraisals was found with scores derived from children's open-ended descriptions of their appraisals. Cross-sectional structural equation models found significant paths between negative appraisal and psychological symptoms, over and above the direct effects of the traditional life event measure of stress. Structural equation modeling of longitudinal (5.5 months) data found a significant path from Time 1 appraisal to Time 2 anxiety for the older children.

Keywords

Preadolescent Children Divorce Negative Appraisal Negative Self-Appraisal Negative Other-Appraisal Material Loss Confirmatory Factor Analysis Structural Equation Modeling Psychological Symptoms Anxiety Life Event Stress Convergent Validity Discriminant Validity Longitudinal Study Age Differences
Details
Volume 67
Issue 5
Pages 2166-2182
ISSN 1467-8624
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