Author:
Rescorla Leslie A.,Achenbach Thomas M.,Ivanova Masha Y.,Bilenberg Niels,Bjarnadottir Gudrun,Denner Silvia,Dias Pedro,Dobrean Anca,Döpfner Manfred,Frigerio Alessandra,Gonçalves Miguel,Guðmundsson Halldór,Jusiene Roma,Kristensen Solvejg,Lecannelier Felipe,Leung Patrick W. L.,Liu Jianghong,Löbel Sofia P.,Machado Bárbara César,Markovic Jasminka,Mas Paola A.,Esmaeili Elaheh Mohammad,Montirosso Rosario,Plück Julia,Pronaj Adelina Ahmeti,Rodriguez Jorge T.,Rojas Pamela O.,Schmeck Klaus,Shahini Mimoza,Silva Jaime R.,van der Ende Jan,Verhulst Frank C.
Abstract
This study tested societal effects on caregiver/teacher ratings of behavioral/emotional problems for 10,521 preschoolers from 15 societies. Many societies had problem scale scores within a relatively narrow range, despite differences in language, culture, and other characteristics. The small age and gender effects were quite similar across societies. The rank orders of mean item ratings were similar across diverse societies. For 7,380 children from 13 societies, ratings were also obtained from a parent. In all 13 societies, mean Total Problems scores derived from parent ratings were significantly higher than mean Total Problems scores derived from caregiver/teacher ratings, although the size of the difference varied somewhat across societies. Mean cross-informant agreement for problem scale scores varied across societies. Societies were very similar with respect to which problem items, on average, received high versus low ratings from parents and caregivers/teachers. Within every society, cross-informant agreement for item ratings varied widely across children. In most respects, results were quite similar across 15 very diverse societies.
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Clinical Psychology,Developmental and Educational Psychology,Education