An Examination of the Latent Structure and Reproducibility of the Life Skills Scale for Sport in Botswana and Ghana
Loading...
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Frontiers in Psychology
Abstract
With the growing interest in sport-based positive youth development (PYD) programs
across the African continent, there is a need to establish suitable measures to evaluate
the success of these programs in fostering PYD. The Life Skills Scale for Sport (LSSS)
was recently developed as a sport-specific measure of life skills development. Despite
its good psychometric properties among British youth sport participants, cross-cultural
evidence indicates differences in the conceptualization of the eight factors measured by
the LSSS. To determine the suitability of the LSSS for use in the African youth sport
context, this study examined the latent structure and reproducibility of scores produced
by the scale in a sample of youth sport participants from Botswana and Ghana. Cross-sectional data from a sample of 495 youth athletes (male = 51.72%), aged 12–21 years
(M = 16.76, SD = 1.58) from junior and senior secondary schools was used in this
study. Confirmatory factor analysis and exploratory structural equation modeling were
conducted, and conventional fit indices were used to assess model fit. Results on the
original LSSS model indicated the need for model re-specification in the current sample.
A re-specified LSSS, consisting of the original eight factors but only 34 of the original
43 items demonstrated improved fit and adequate internal consistency. Scores derived
from the re-specified LSSS proved to be a valid estimate of life skills development in the
current sample of youth sport participants. This has important implications for the utility
of the LSSS in different cultures.
Description
Research Article
