6533b857fe1ef96bd12b3c73

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Development and Validation of the ADAS Scale and Prediction of Attitudes Toward Affective-Sexual Diversity Among Spanish Secondary Students

Aida Castaño-torrijosIsabel CuevasHelena Garrido-hernansaizManuel Martín-fernández

subject

MaleAdolescentSocial Psychologymedia_common.quotation_subjecteducation050109 social psychologyHuman sexualityPeer GroupEducationDevelopmental psychologyGender Studies0504 sociologyCronbach's alphaSurveys and QuestionnairesItem response theoryHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesStudentsGeneral Psychologymedia_commonPsychological Tests05 social sciencesMultilevel modelReproducibility of Results050401 social sciences methodsCognitionCultural DiversityHispanic or LatinoHomosexualityGeneral MedicineAttitudeScale (social sciences)Sexual orientationFemaleFactor Analysis StatisticalPsychologySexualitySocial psychologyDiversity (politics)

description

Violence against non-heterosexual adolescents in educational contexts remains a worrying reality, but no adequate attitudes toward affective-sexual diversity (AtASD) measure exists for Spanish adolescent students. We developed a 27-item scale including cognitive, affective, and behavioral aspects, which was completed by 696 secondary school students from the Madrid area. Factor analyses suggested a unidimensional model, Cronbach's alpha indicated excellent scale scores reliability, and item calibration under the item response theory framework showed that the scale is especially informative for homophobic attitudes. A hierarchical multiple regression analysis showed that variables traditionally related to AtASD (gender, age, religion, nationality, perceived parental/peer attitudes, direct contact with LGB people) also were so in our sample. Moreover, interest in sexuality topics and perceived center's efforts to provide AtASD education were related to better AtASD. Our scale was reliable and valid, and it may also prove useful in efforts to detect those students with homophobic attitudes and to guide interventions.

https://doi.org/10.1080/00918369.2017.1364951