Abstract:
ORIENTATION : Most psychological measuring instruments developed in Western, educated,
industrial, rich, democratic (W.E.I.R.D.) countries have been found to inadequately capture
and represent personality outside the borders of these countries. Consequently, culturally
informed or indigenous measuring instruments need to be developed.
RESEARCH PURPOSE : This study aimed to inspect whether an overlap exists between the
empirical data obtained and the theoretical six-factor SAPI framework, providing evidence for
an indigenous personality structure in a multi-cultural context.
MOTIVATION FOR THE STUDY : Psychological professionals in South Africa have been criticised for
using culturally biased instruments that do not display an accurate representation of the 11
official cultural groups. The South African Personality Inventory (SAPI) aims to address these
criticisms, highlighting the importance of establishing the cultural applicability of the model
through model-fit analyses.
RESEARCH APPROACH/DESIGN AND METHOD : A quantitative, cross-sectional design was used to
administer the SAPI-English version to a sample of employed, unemployed and employmentseeking
South Africans (N = 3912). Exploratory Structural Equation Modelling (ESEM) was
used to model the data.
MAIN FINDINGS : The results revealed that the model was a good fit to the data and that the SAPI
factors accurately represent personality in a multi-cultural context.
PRACTICAL/MANAGERIAL IMPLICATION : Using a well-researched indigenous personality assessment
like the SAPI can assist South African organisations to fairly and reliably assess people across the 11 official cultural groups.
CONTRIBUTION/VALUE-ADD : This study advances the processes surrounding indigenous test
development through the establishment of a personality model and measure that encapsulates
personality traits exhibited in a multi-cultural context.