Structural Equivalence of Vocational Interests Across Culture and Gender: Differential Item Functioning in the Strong Interest Inventory

190 p. Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2001. The present study evaluated the structural equivalence of the Strong Interest Inventory (SII: Harmon et al., 1994) across Icelandic and US cultures and across gender within culture. Gender differences in structure were also com...

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Main Author: Einarsdottir, Sif
Other Authors: Rounds, James
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
psy
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2142/79622
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spelling fttriple:oai:gotriple.eu:http://hdl.handle.net/2142/79622 2023-05-15T16:47:43+02:00 Structural Equivalence of Vocational Interests Across Culture and Gender: Differential Item Functioning in the Strong Interest Inventory Einarsdottir, Sif Rounds, James 2015-09-25 http://hdl.handle.net/2142/79622 en eng (MiAaPQ)AAI3023048 http://hdl.handle.net/2142/79622 undefined IDEALS psy socio Text https://vocabularies.coar-repositories.org/resource_types/c_18cf/ 2015 fttriple 2023-01-22T18:52:31Z 190 p. Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2001. The present study evaluated the structural equivalence of the Strong Interest Inventory (SII: Harmon et al., 1994) across Icelandic and US cultures and across gender within culture. Gender differences in structure were also compared across countries. Methods developed within the framework of item response theory were applied to test the differential item functioning (DIF) of the items in the inventory. The issue of structural equivalence was addressed at the item level, focusing on the items as indicators of latent trait. The six General Occupational Theme (GOT) scales and the 25 Basic Interest Scales (BIS) in the Strong Interest Inventory were defined as valid subscales for the analysis. Differential item functioning (DIF) was detected using the SIBTEST procedure (Shealy & Stout, 1993). The POLYSIB program was applied to a college sample of 1860 women and 1105 men from the US and 1101 women and 479 men from Iceland. Half of the items used in the GOT and BIS scales showed DIF across culture. Gender DIF was detected in two-thirds of the items. All the six GOT scales were also found to have dimensionally distinct items indicating that they are not measuring single trait. There was no difference in the amount of gender DIF in Iceland and the US. The cross-cultural differences detected could not be clearly explained in the study. The gender DIF results indicate that a sex-type dimension may be influencing the responses of men and women. The implications of this study for the applicability of the SII in Iceland are discussed. The construct validity of the SII for men and women and the theoretical formulation of interest types are addressed. U of I Only Restricted to the U of I community idenfinitely during batch ingest of legacy ETDs Text Iceland Unknown
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id fttriple
language English
topic psy
socio
spellingShingle psy
socio
Einarsdottir, Sif
Structural Equivalence of Vocational Interests Across Culture and Gender: Differential Item Functioning in the Strong Interest Inventory
topic_facet psy
socio
description 190 p. Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2001. The present study evaluated the structural equivalence of the Strong Interest Inventory (SII: Harmon et al., 1994) across Icelandic and US cultures and across gender within culture. Gender differences in structure were also compared across countries. Methods developed within the framework of item response theory were applied to test the differential item functioning (DIF) of the items in the inventory. The issue of structural equivalence was addressed at the item level, focusing on the items as indicators of latent trait. The six General Occupational Theme (GOT) scales and the 25 Basic Interest Scales (BIS) in the Strong Interest Inventory were defined as valid subscales for the analysis. Differential item functioning (DIF) was detected using the SIBTEST procedure (Shealy & Stout, 1993). The POLYSIB program was applied to a college sample of 1860 women and 1105 men from the US and 1101 women and 479 men from Iceland. Half of the items used in the GOT and BIS scales showed DIF across culture. Gender DIF was detected in two-thirds of the items. All the six GOT scales were also found to have dimensionally distinct items indicating that they are not measuring single trait. There was no difference in the amount of gender DIF in Iceland and the US. The cross-cultural differences detected could not be clearly explained in the study. The gender DIF results indicate that a sex-type dimension may be influencing the responses of men and women. The implications of this study for the applicability of the SII in Iceland are discussed. The construct validity of the SII for men and women and the theoretical formulation of interest types are addressed. U of I Only Restricted to the U of I community idenfinitely during batch ingest of legacy ETDs
author2 Rounds, James
format Text
author Einarsdottir, Sif
author_facet Einarsdottir, Sif
author_sort Einarsdottir, Sif
title Structural Equivalence of Vocational Interests Across Culture and Gender: Differential Item Functioning in the Strong Interest Inventory
title_short Structural Equivalence of Vocational Interests Across Culture and Gender: Differential Item Functioning in the Strong Interest Inventory
title_full Structural Equivalence of Vocational Interests Across Culture and Gender: Differential Item Functioning in the Strong Interest Inventory
title_fullStr Structural Equivalence of Vocational Interests Across Culture and Gender: Differential Item Functioning in the Strong Interest Inventory
title_full_unstemmed Structural Equivalence of Vocational Interests Across Culture and Gender: Differential Item Functioning in the Strong Interest Inventory
title_sort structural equivalence of vocational interests across culture and gender: differential item functioning in the strong interest inventory
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/2142/79622
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_source IDEALS
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