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Adolescent Reputation Enhancement: Differentiating Delinquent, Nondelinquent, and At-risk Youths
Authors:Annemaree Carroll,Stephen Houghton,John Hattie,&   Kevin Durkin
Affiliation:Schonell Special Education Research Centre, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia. a.carroll@mailbox.uq.edu.au
Abstract:This research reports the findings of two studies conducted to measure and then investigate differences between delinquent, nondelinquent, and at-risk youths' orientations towards reputation enhancement. In the first study, concerning item selection and scale development, the factor structure and content validity of a potential Reputation Enhancement Scale were tested by examining the item responses of the scale completed by 230 high-school students. In the second study, the scale was validated by comparing the item responses of 80 delinquent, 90 at-risk, and 90 nondelinquent adolescents with the responses of the original students. The instrument was found to be reliable (alphas from .64 to .92), indicating that the factors are dependable across different samples, and the coefficients of congruence were sufficiently high to investigate meaningful group differences. Three second-order factors (Conforming Reputation, Nonconforming Reputation, Self-presentation) were derived from the 15 first-order factors. Although multivariate analyses revealed significant differences between the reputational orientations of delinquent, at-risk, and nondelinquent participants, the self-presentation second-order factor did not differentiate the three groups.
Keywords:Delinquency    adolescence    social status    peer relations    reputation enhancement.
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