Title: Measurement in the psychology of religion and spirituality
1Measurement in the psychology of religion and
spirituality
2The current state
- The ability to reliably measure is a key
indicator of the fields health and maturity. - Instruments are reasonably effective and
available in sufficient variety for almost any
task in the psychology of religion
(Gorsuch,1984). - However, success can reinforce an interest in
measurement itself and not the objects of
measurement (Gorsuch,1984).
3Measurement
- Gorsuch (1990) contended that new scales should
only be developed if a need is established on one
of four bases - Existing measures are not psychometrically
adequate to the task - Conceptual or theoretical issues demand
modification of existing measures - No existing measures appear useful within a
clinical population - There are no measures available for particular
constructs.
4Key papers
- Gorsuch, R.L. (1984). Measurement The boon and
bane of investigating religion. American
Psychologist, 39, 228-236. - Gorsuch, R.L. (1990). Measurement in psychology
of religion revisited. Journal of Psychology and
Christianity, 9, 82-92.
5Measurement
- Gorsuchs advice has been largely ignored with
many new measures unnecessarily duplicating
existing measures. - Hill and Hood (1999) reviews 125 scales
- Researchers are encouraged to refrain from
constructing new measures and instead to utilize
(modify) existing measures.
6Key books
- Hill, P.C. Hood, R.W. Jr. (1999). Measures of
religiosity. Birmingham, Ala Religious Education
Press. (1 copy - BR110.M42).
7Key books
- (Each chapter comprises cluster of several
individual measures)1. Scales of Religious
Belief and Practice2. Scales of Religious
Attitudes3. Scales of Religious Orientation4.
Scales of Religious Development5. Scales of
Religious Commitment and Involvement6. Scales of
Religious Experience7. Scales of Religious/Moral
Values8. Multidimensional Scales of
Religiousness9. Scales of Religious Coping and
Problem-Solving10. Scales of Spirituality and
Mysticism11. Scales of the God Concept12.
Scales of Religious Fundamentalism13. Scales of
Views of Death / Afterlife14. Scales of Divine
Intervention / Religious Attribution15. Scales
of Forgiveness16. Scales of Institutional
Religion17. Scales of Religious Constructs
8Hurdles and advances
- Although the variety of scales do a respectably
good job of measuring religiousness, collectively
they are not without limits and deficiencies. - Some limitations due to the inherently complex
nature of religious and spiritual constructs. - Other deficiencies are the responsibility of the
scientific community. - However, researchers have made systematic strides
in addressing many shortcomings.
9Exercise
10Conceptual clarity
- Allports (1950) intrinsic-extrinsic (I-E)
religious orientation model provided the foremost
research framework in the psychology of religion. - Allport posited that intrinsic faith was a master
motive in life, an end in itself, a religion to
be lived and not just used. - In contrast an extrinsic faith motivation tends
to use religion for ones own self-interest, a
means to some other end, a religion to be used
rather than lived.
11Conceptual clarity
- Much subsequent scientific effort was spent on
issues of measurement despite the fact that the
underlying theory had not been sufficiently
developed. - For example, Kirkpatrick and Hood (1990) claimed
that I-E model was theoretically impoverished.
12Key papers
- Maltby, J., Lewis, C. A. (1996). Measuring
intrinsic and extrinsic orientation to religion
Amendments for its use among religious and
non-religious samples. Personality and Individual
Differences, 21, 937-946. - Joseph, S. Lewis, C. A. (1997). The Francis
Scale of Attitude Towards Christianity Intrinsic
or extrinsic religion? Psychological Reports,80,
609-610.
13Conceptual clarity
- In the past, despite the variety of research,
little had been drawn from well-established
theoretical models in mainstream psychology. - More recently, there is greater application from
such mainstream literature as the psychology of
coping, attachment theory, developmental
psychology, and personality theory.
14Sample Representativeness
- Research in psychology generally has been
afflicted with unrepresentative samples, most
notably convenience samples of young college
students. - The same applies to research in psychology of
religion. - However, in addition Protestantism dominates the
samples found in much of the literature.
15Sample Representativeness
- Such domination can be problematic when it is
desirable to use a scale with a more pluralistic
population
16Cultural Sensitivity
- Measures sometimes do not reflect sensitivity to
cultural variables. - Not only is there a problem of Protestant
over-representation but also one of white,
middle-class, and U.S. over-representation. - Additionally, there is a need for cultural
sensitivity when creating new or modifying
existing measures to generalize research to
non-Western religious traditions.
17Sustained Research Programmes
- A major problem within the psychology of religion
has been the failure to develop sustained
research programmes using standardized measures. - Exceptions are religious questing (Batson,
Shoenrade, Ventis, 1993) mysticism (Hood,
1975) religious coping (Pargament, 1997)
intrinsic-extrinsic religious orientations see
Hood et al., (1996) for review.
18Key books
- Kay, W.K. Francis, L.J. (1996). Drift from the
Churches Attitude toward Christianity during
childhood and adolescence. Cardiff, Wales
University of Wales Press. (3 copies -
BV639.Y7K28)
19Sustained Research Programmes
- Without a clear conceptual understanding of
religion and spirituality it is difficult to
generate and sustain research programmes. - Funding for research on religion has, until
recently, been virtually non-existent. - Much religious research has been conducted within
the context of other research agendas
frequently involving single-item measures of
religion.
20Key website
21Sustained Research Programmes
- Many scales have not been used beyond their
initial introduction. - In such cases any validity assessments or
normative data are usually based upon a single
sample. - However, recently there is repeated usage of some
measures, particularly those more recently
developed.
22Alternatives to self-report measures
- The limitations of self-report measures apply
equally to the psychology of religion - Alternatives include
- Attitude accessibility - measured by response
time (Hill, 1994) - Pictures to assess religious coping (Pendleton
et al., 2002) - Physiological indicators such as PET scans
(Newberg et al., 2001)
23A Hierarchical Approach
- Tsang and McCullough (2003) propose that religion
can be viewed from two levels - Level 1 (dispositional) reflects broad individual
differences in highly abstracted trait like
qualities - The goal of measurement at level 1 is to assess
broad dispositional differences in religious
tendencies or traits so that one might draw
conclusions about how religious a person is
(Tsang McCullough, 2003, p. 349)
24A Hierarchical Approach
- Level 2 (functional) is the operational level
in that people manifest tremendous diversity in
how they experience religious realities and their
motivations for being religious - Level 2 measures assess subdimensions of the
general religiousness factor
25Four Criteria
- Four criteria used for evaluating scales are
summarized in Table 3.1 - Theoretical basis
- Scale should have theoretical underpinning
- Researcher should have a clear theoretical basis
for the research at hand. - Representative sampling generalization
- Scales rare for non-Western traditions
26Four Criteria
- Reliability
- Generally assessed by internal consistency and
test-retest reliability. - Validity
- Assessed by convergent, factorial, criterion, and
content validity. - Problems due to non-representative samples.
- Problems due to lack of sustained research across
different samples.
27Key papers
- Lewis, C.A., Cruise, S.M., Lattimar, R. (2007).
Temporal stability of the Francis Scale of
Attitude toward Christianity short-form among 10-
to 12-year-old English children Test-retest data
over 15 weeks. Archive für Religionspsychologie,
29, 259-267. - Lewis, C.A., Cruise, S.M., Mc Guckin, C.
(2005). Temporal stability of the Francis Scale
of Attitude toward Christianity short-form
Test-retest data over one week. Psychological
Reports, 96, 266-268. - Lewis, C.A., Francis, L.J., Ziebertz, H.-G.,
Kwiran, M. (2005). Reliability and validity of a
German translation of a short scale of attitude
toward Christianity. Individual Differences
Research, 3, 205-212. - Francis, L.J., Kerr, S., Lewis, C.A. (2005).
Assessing attitude toward Christianity among
adolescents in South Africa The Francis Scale.
South African Journal of Psychology, 35, 147-155.
28Discussion of selected scales
- Level 1 Measures of dispositional religiousness
- Scales that assess general religiousness or
spirituality - Spiritual Transcendence Scale (Piedmont, 1999)
and Mysticism Scale (Hood, 1975) measure general
spiritual orientations without reference to a
specific religious tradition - Spiritual Well-Being Scale (SWBS Paloutzian
Ellison, 1982) has been used in hundreds of
studies.
29Discussion of selected scales
- Scales that assess religious or spiritual
commitment - Religious Commitment Inventory (RCI 10
Worthington et al., 2003) has been tested on
individuals from a variety of religious
traditions - Santa Clara Strength of Religious Faith
Questionnaire (SCSRFQ Plante Boccaccini, 1997)
is used in the general population not just
religious
30Discussion of selected scales
- Scales that assess religious or spiritual
development - Faith Maturity Scale (Benson et al., 1993)
emphasises behavioural manifestations of faith
rather than belief content - Spiritual Assessment Inventory (Hall Edwards,
1996) has a strong theoretical base but is
limited to a Western Christian context.
31Discussion of selected scales
- Level 2 Measures of functional religiousness
- Scales that assess religious social
participation - Religious Involvement Inventory (Hilty Morgan,
1985) includes a 14 item church involvement
scale - Attitude toward the Church Scale (Thurstone
Chave, 1929) requires revision because of dated
wording.
32Discussion of selected scales
- Scales that assess religious or spiritual private
practice - Buddhist Beliefs and Practices Scale (Emavardhana
Tori,1997) assesses agreement with Buddhist
teachings - Religious Background and Behaviour Scale (Connors
et al., 1996) is increasingly used in various
research programmes.
33Discussion of selected scales
- Scales that assess religion as a motivating force
- Revised Religious Orientation Scale (Gorsuch
McPherson, 1989) is probably the single best
measure of religious orientation - Quest Scale (Batson Shoenrade, 1991) emphasises
the positive role of doubt.
34Discussion of selected scales
- Scales that assess religious or spiritual
experiences - Daily Spiritual Experiences Scale (Underwood,
1999) makes spirituality its central focus - Measure of Religious Strain (Exline et al., 2000)
measures religious struggles.
35Discussion of selected scales
- Multidimensional Measures
- Multidimensional Measure of Religion and
Spirituality (The Fetzer Institute/National
Institute of Aging Working Group, 1999) has
appropriate reliability and validity.
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