Artigo Revisado por pares

Dimensionality and Norms of the Rosenberg Self-esteem Scale in a German General Population Sample

2008; Hogrefe Verlag; Volume: 24; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1027/1015-5759.24.3.190

ISSN

2151-2426

Autores

Marcus Roth, Oliver Decker, Philipp Yorck Herzberg, Elmar Brähler,

Tópico(s)

Cultural Differences and Values

Resumo

This study analyzed the dimensionality of the German version of Rosenberg’s Self-Esteem scale (RSES) in a nationally representative population sample of 4,988 subjects (46.4% males; aged 14–92 years). Using confirmatory factor analysis, one- and two-dimensional models were tested. Results suggest that the RSES is a two-dimensional scale comprising the highly correlated components positive and negative self-evaluation, which constitute a unitary construct of global self-esteem at the second-order level. In order to obtain a more conclusive solution, an item response theory (IRT) analysis (partial credit model) was conducted. Results lend support to a one-dimensional view of the RSES. Furthermore, psychometric properties and norm values based on the representative sample are reported. Analyses revealed extremely high response probabilities for all items, as a consequence of which self-esteem cannot be differentiated at the upper end of the range.

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