The life events scale for students: Validation for use with British samples

https://doi.org/10.1016/0191-8869(96)00005-0Get rights and content

Abstract

The life events scale for students is a checklist measure of life events intended for use with undergraduate populations. The report describes the validation of the scale for use with British undergraduates. Ratings for the events on the scale were obtained from a sample of 191 undergraduates. A second analysis using a sample of 40 undergraduates showed that scores on the scale were predictive of elevated levels of psychopathology. Furthermore, this relationship was largely independent of negative affectivity or repression-sensitization. The Life Events Scale for Students provides a suitable measure for use in stress research using undergraduate populations.

References (20)

  • M. Zimmerman

    Methodological issues in the assessment of life events: A review of issues and research

    Clinical Psychology Review

    (1983)
  • G.W. Brown

    Life events and measurement

  • G.W. Brown et al.

    Life events and psychiatric disorders. Part 1: Some methodological issues

    Psychological Medicine

    (1973)
  • Clements, K. & Turpin, G. (In preparation.) Life event stress, physiological reactivity and psychological...
  • A.F. Costantini et al.

    The life change inventory: A device for quantifying psychological magnitude of change experienced by college students

    Psychological Reports

    (1974)
  • C.S. Crandall et al.

    Measuring life event stress in the lives of college undergraduates: The undergraduate stress questionnaire (USQ)

    Journal of Behavioural Medicine

    (1992)
  • D.P. Crowne et al.

    The Approval Motive

    (1964)
  • B.S. Dohrenwend et al.

    Exemplification of a method for scaling life events: The PERI life events scale

    Journal of Health & Social Behaviour

    (1978)
  • D. Goldberg
  • D.M. Gorman

    A review of studies comparing checklist and interview methods of data collection in life event research

    Behavioral Medicine

    (1993)
There are more references available in the full text version of this article.

Cited by (0)

View full text