Affiliation:
1. Australian Catholic University, Strathfield, New South Wales, Australia
Abstract
This study used recent advances in attitude and self-perception research to develop an Attitude to Non-Violence Scale (ANVS). Participants were students from six high schools in Australia ( N = 727). Confirmatory factor analysis using within-construct and between-construct validation approaches found two positive attitude sub-scales: Cognitive (proactive understanding) and Affective (do not endorse violence), both showing convergent and discriminant validity. Scale equivalence tests found that the sub-scales were applicable to boys and girls and to junior and senior grades. Structural equation modeling found that boys had less supportive attitudes to non-violence cognitively, whereas female students in senior secondary classes had less positive attitudes to non-violence affectively. The ANVS can be easily administered to assess youth’s non-violence attitudes, which may direct interventions focusing on boys’ cognitive aspects while maintaining girls’ positive affective attitudes toward non-violence as they mature. The positively framed instrument is suitable for education settings especially in high-risk locations where violence is prevalent.
Subject
Applied Psychology,Clinical Psychology
Cited by
2 articles.
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1. Jainism: A Religion of Compassion and Non-violence;Religious and Spiritual Practices in India;2023
2. Measurement of Nonviolence;Gandhi and the Psychology of Nonviolence, Volume 1;2020