Investigating the psychometric properties of the Rosenberg self-esteem scale for South African residents of greater Pretoria
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Date
Authors
Westaway, Margaret S.
Jordaan, Esme
Tsai, Jennifer
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Sage
Abstract
Interviewers administered the Rosenberg Self-Esteem scale (RSES) to five
groups of Black (formal township and informal settlement), White, Indian,
and mixed race adult residents of Greater Pretoria. The results demonstrated
that the RSES was psychometrically sound for the five groups. The
minimal effects of sociodemographic characteristics on global self-esteem
showed that the RSES and its two dimensions, self-competence (SC) and self-liking (SL), were suitable in this setting. All five groups scored above the
theoretical midpoint of the RSES, indicating that generally positive selfevaluations
appear to be universal. The relationships between positively and
negatively worded items, SC, and SL attested to the following: internal
structure reliability, congruence between positive and negative items, no
negative biases in response, and concordance between SC and SL dimensions.
The significant differences between informal settlement residents and
the other four groups on global self-esteem, positively and negatively
worded items, and SC and SL were possibly due to physiological needs taking
precedence over higher order needs.
Description
Keywords
Reliability, Item validity, Principal components, Analysis, Greater Pretoria residents, Rosenberg Self-Esteem scale (RSES)
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Westaway, MS, Jordaan, E & Tsai, J 2015, 'Investigating the psychometric properties of the Rosenberg self-esteem scale for South African residents of greater Pretoria', Evaluation and the Health Professions, vol. 38, no. 2, pp. 181-199.