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Measurement of movement confidence with a stunt movement confidence inventory

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CONTRIBUTORS:
  Author Griffin, N. S.
  Author Crawford, M. E.
JOURNAL:
  Journal of Sport & Exercise Psychology (JSEP), 11(1), 26 - 40.
YEAR: 1989
PUB TYPE: Journal Article
SUBJECT(S): child; movement; confidence; evaluation; test-reliability
DISCIPLINE: No discipline assigned
HTTP: https://secure.sportquest.com/su.cfm?articleno=234722&title=234722
LANGUAGE: English
PUB ID: 103-340-296 (Last edited on 2002/02/27 18:43:55 US/Mountain)
SPONSOR(S):
 
ABSTRACT:
The purpose of this study were (a) to construct and validate a Stunt Movement Confidence Inventory (SMCI) that would reliably discriminate between high- and low-confidence children and (b) to examine perceived confidence in light of assumptions from the movement confidence model. Interaction of three components postulated in the model was studied by analyzing the response patterns of 356 children. Reliability coefficients for item, subscale, total scale, and subject stability ranged from r=.79 to .93. SMCI subscales successfully classified 88% of all subjects with a 52.3% improvement over chance and a validity coefficient of .98. Response profiles of low- and high-confidence groups validated the identity and separability of the model's theoretical components-competence, enjoyment, and harm. The SMCI was reliable and valid in discriminating between high-and low-confidence children. Constructs and validates a Stunt Movement Confidence Inventory (SMCI) that reliably discriminates between high- and low-confidence children, and examines perceived confidence in light of assumptions from the movement confidence model. Studies the interaction of three components postulated in the model (competence, potential for enjoyment, and harm) by analyzing the response patterns of 356 children. Reliability coefficients for item, subscale, total scale, and subject stability range from .79 to .93. SMCI subscales successfully classify of all subjects with a 52.3% improvement over chance and a validity coefficient of .98. Response profiles of low- and high-confidence groups validate the identity and separability of the model's theoretical components. Finds that the SMCI is reliable and valid in discriminating between high- and low-confidence children.
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