Bibliographic Details
| Title: |
Behavioral and Emotional Rating Scale-2 Parent Report: Exploring a Spanish Version With At-Risk Students. |
| Authors: |
Sharkey, Jill1 jsharkey@education.ucsb.edu, Sukkyung You1, Morrison, Gale1, Griffiths, Amy1 |
| Source: |
Behavioral Disorders. Nov2009, Vol. 35 Issue 1, p53-65. 13p. |
| Subject Terms: |
*Parent participation in education, *At-risk youth, *School psychology, *Parent-child relationships, *Child psychology, *Behavior disorders in children, *Education, Hispanic American children, Socioeconomic factors |
| Abstract: |
Youth strengths are as important to consider as deficits in understanding developmental outcomes and thus are an important component of psychoeducational assessment. Latino/as are understudied with regard to strength-based constructs, although cultural and socioeconomic factors may be related to differences in Latino/a parents' views of their children's strengths and school experiences. The Behavioral and Emotional Rating Scale-2 (BERS-2) Parent Report is one of the most widely used measures to examine school-based strengths of students. With two sets of data collected with Spanish-speaking Latino/a parents of students aged 9 to 14 years, the authors examined the BERS-2 to explore and then preliminarily confirm latent constructs present in reports of their children's strengths. A three-factor model, labeled Self-Control, School Participation, and Emotional Health, emerged as an alternative fit to the data. Results indicate that the BERS-2 measures culturally sensitive constructs, yet amended procedures may enhance the assessment of student strengths from the parent perspective, particularly when working with Spanish-speaking Latino/a families. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
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| Database: |
Education Research Complete |