- International Journal of Assessment Tools in Education
- Volume:8 Issue:3
- Adaptation of Statistics Anxiety Scale to Turkish: Validity and Reliability Study
Adaptation of Statistics Anxiety Scale to Turkish: Validity and Reliability Study
Authors : İsmail DURAK, Yalçın KARAGÖZ
Pages : 667-683
Doi:10.21449/ijate.863225
View : 18 | Download : 4
Publication Date : 2021-09-05
Article Type : Research Paper
Abstract :The aim of this study is to adapt the Statistics Anxiety Scale insert ignore into journalissuearticles values(SAS); developed by Vigil-Colet et al. insert ignore into journalissuearticles values(2008); to Turkish. This study is expected to fill an important gap in the literature since no valid and reliable specific statistics anxiety scale developed or adapted in Turkish for undergraduate students in the literature is available. The sample consists of a total of 439 university students, 258 women and 181 men, studying at Düzce University. The construct validity of the Turkish form of SAS was examined by EFA and DFA. Also, for the criterion validity, a different statistics anxiety scale whose validity and reliability tested was used. As a result of EFA, a three-dimensional structure was obtained as in the structure of the original scale. According to the CFA results, which is the second analysis for construct validity, all fit index results of the model were at an acceptable level. Thus, the CFA results supported the three-factor structure obtained from EFA findings. As a result of the reliability analysis, the Cronbach`s Alpha internal coefficients of the SAS and its subscales and, the Guttman and Spearman-Brown internal consistency coefficients of Split-Half Reliability methods were quite high and above the limit of 0.70. For item discrimination, items have good discrimination by obtaining all values above 0.30 lower limit in the results. When the results of the study are evaluated as a whole, the SAS form adapted to Turkish can be used as a guiding scale to measure the statistics anxiety of undergraduate students.Keywords : Statistics anxiety, Measuring statistics anxiety, Scale adaptation, Validity, Reliability