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Emotional and psychological well-being in children: The development and validation of the Stirling Children’s Well-being Scale
Resource type
            Journal Article
        Authors/contributors
                    - Liddle, Ian (Author)
 - Carter, Greg F.A. (Author)
 
Title
            Emotional and psychological well-being in children: The development and validation of the Stirling Children’s Well-being Scale
        Abstract
            The Stirling Children’s Well-being Scale (SCWBS) was developed by the Stirling Council Educational Psychology Service (UK) as a holistic, positively worded measure of emotional and psychological well-being in children aged eight to 15 years. Drawing on current theories of well-being and Positive Psychology, the aim was to provide a means of measuring the effectiveness of interventions and projects designed to promote children’s well-being and emotional development. A total of 18 schools and 1849 children participated in the construction and validation of the scale, which ultimately emerged as a short, robust measure comprising 12 items. The scale is offered for use by educational and health professionals interested in promoting and measuring the emotional development and well-being of children and the effectiveness of interventions.
        Publication
            Educational Psychology in Practice
        Volume
            31
        Issue
            2
        Pages
            174-185
        Date
            2015-04-03
        ISSN
            0266-7363
        Short Title
            Emotional and psychological well-being in children
        Accessed
            21/05/2025, 07:57
        Library Catalogue
            Taylor and Francis+NEJM
        Extra
            Publisher: Routledge
_eprint: https://doi.org/10.1080/02667363.2015.1008409
        Citation
            Liddle, I., & Carter, G. F. A. (2015). Emotional and psychological well-being in children: The development and validation of the Stirling Children’s Well-being Scale. Educational Psychology in Practice, 31(2), 174–185. https://doi.org/10.1080/02667363.2015.1008409
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