Structure of Anxiety Symptoms in Urban Children: A Test of Competing Factor Analytic of the Revised Children's Manifest Anxiety Scale

Kamila S. White, Albert D. Farrell

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The Revised Children's Manifest Anxiety Scale (RCMAS; C. R. Reynolds & B. O. Richmond, 1985) is among the most widely used self-report measures of children's anxiety. The authors compared its current empirically derived factor structure with theory-driven models derived from 8 experts on child anxiety using concept mapping. Confirmatory factor analyses compared models using data from 898 seventh graders in an urban public school system serving a high percentage of African Americans. The most parsimonious best-fitting model was an expert-derived model with factors reflecting anxious arousal, social evaluation-oversensitivity, worry, and a higher order factor. This model was theoretically meaningful, excluded items less relevant to anxiety, and was invariant across gender. Future research with the RCMAS should consider use of these dimensions. The combination of qualitative and quantitative methodology used in this study appeared to have considerable utility for refining measures.
Original languageAmerican English
JournalJournal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology
Volume69
DOIs
StatePublished - 2001

Disciplines

  • Psychiatry and Psychology

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