6533b838fe1ef96bd12a3ad6

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Assessing Procrastination

Eva M. KleinMarkus ZengerManfred E. BeutelElmar BrählerKai W. MüllerKlaus Wölfling

subject

050103 clinical psychologyScreening testScale (ratio)business.industrymedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesProcrastination050109 social psychologyFactor structureConvergent validityStatisticsGlobal Positioning System0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesMeasurement invariancebusinessPsychologyApplied Psychologymedia_commonCurse of dimensionality

description

Abstract. The short form of the General Procrastination Scale (GPS-K; Klingsieck & Fries, 2012 ; Lay, 1986 ) is a reliable self-report scale measuring general procrastination. The presumed one-dimensional factor structure of the scale, however, has never been examined. Thus, the purposes of this representative study were to examine its dimensionality and factorial invariance across age and sex, and to provide norm values of the German general population. The GPS-K was administered to a representative community sample ( N = 2,527; age range 14–95 years). A confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) was conducted. To explore convergent validity, standardized scales of distress and life satisfaction were used. Measurement invariance across sex and age was tested. The CFA revealed an unsatisfactory model fit of the presumed unidimensional factor structure of the GPS-K. Therefore, a 5-item one-dimensional version of the scale was suggested (General Procrastination Scale – Screening; GPS-S). Correlations between GPS-S, distress and reduced life satisfaction provide evidence on its convergent validity. The one-dimensional GPS-S can be assumed to be scalar invariant across sex and for participants older than 29 years. The scale can be administered in only a few minutes providing an economic screening for research and practice.

https://doi.org/10.1027/1015-5759/a000441