Authors
Herbert W Marsh, L Francesca Scalas, Benjamin Nagengast
Publication date
2010/6
Journal
Psychological assessment
Volume
22
Issue
2
Pages
366
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Description
Self-esteem, typically measured by the Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale (RSE), is one of the most widely studied constructs in psychology. Nevertheless, there is broad agreement that a simple unidimensional factor model, consistent with the original design and typical application in applied research, does not provide an adequate explanation of RSE responses. However, there is no clear agreement about what alternative model is most appropriate—or even a clear rationale for how to test competing interpretations. Three alternative interpretations exist:(a) 2 substantively important trait factors (positive and negative self-esteem),(b) 1 trait factor and ephemeral method artifacts associated with positively or negatively worded items, or (c) 1 trait factor and stable response-style method factors associated with item wording. We have posited 8 alternative models and structural equation model tests based on longitudinal data …
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