Abstract:
The Social Emotional Health Survey-Secondary (SEHS-S), which is a measure of core
psychological assets based on a higher-order model of Covitality, is comprised of 36 items and
four latent traits (with three measured subscales): belief in self (self-efficacy, self-awareness,
and persistence), belief in others (school support, family coherence, and peer support), emotional
competence (emotional regulation, behavioral self-control, and empathy), and engaged living
(gratitude, zest, and optimism). Previous international studies have supported the psychometric
properties of the SEHS-S. The present study extended this research by examining the psychometric
properties of a Spanish-language adaptation with a sample of 1042 Spanish adolescents (Mage = 14.49,
SD = 1.65.). Confirmatory factor analyses replicated the original factorial structure, with hierarchical
omega between 0.66–0.93, with 0.94 for the total score. Factorial invariance across genders
revealed small latent mean differences. A path model evaluated concurrent validity, which
revealed a significant association between Covitality and bidimensional mental health (psychological
distress and well-being). Specifically, correlational analyses showed a negative association
with internalizing/externalizing symptoms, and positive associations with subjective well-being,
health-related quality of life, and prosocial behaviors. This study provides an example of a culturally
relevant adaptation of an international tool to measure student strengths, which is critical to planning
school programming and policy.
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