1. Other-Oriented Perfectionism in Children and Adolescents: Development and Validation of the Other-Oriented Perfectionism Subscale-Junior Form (OOPjr).
- Author
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Hewitt, Paul L., Smith, Martin M., Flett, Gordon L., Ko, Ariel, Kerns, Connor, Birch, Susan, and Peracha, Hira
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EXPERIMENTAL design ,STATISTICS ,NARCISSISM ,RELIABILITY (Personality trait) ,PERFECTIONISM (Personality trait) ,RESEARCH methodology ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation ,SELF-evaluation ,PSYCHOMETRICS ,MULTITRAIT multimethod techniques ,FACTOR analysis ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHILDREN ,ADOLESCENCE - Abstract
Research on adults indicates other-oriented perfectionism (requiring perfection from others) is associated with various consequential outcomes independent of self-oriented perfectionism (requiring perfection of the self) and socially prescribed perfectionism (believing others require perfection of the self). However, historically, the most widely used and researched measure of trait perfectionism in children, the Child-Adolescent Perfectionism Scale (CAPS), has omitted other-oriented perfectionism. In the present study, we address this by reporting on the multisource development and validation of the first self-report measure of other-oriented perfectionism specifically intended for youths: the Other-Oriented Perfectionism Subscale-Junior Form (OOPjr). Children (N = 107; Mage = 11.5, SD = 1.7) completed the OOPjr, CAPS, and measures of perfectionistic self-presentation, narcissism, social disconnection, depressive symptoms, and parental psychological control. Parents provided ratings of children's self-oriented, socially prescribed, and other-oriented perfectionism. Psychometric analyses indicated the OOPjr is a homogenous and internally reliable scale that, when factor analyzed alongside the CAPS, displays measurement invariance across gender and replicates the three-factor solution found in adults. Furthermore, parent ratings of other-oriented perfectionism showed unique positive relationships with OOPjr scores, but not CAPS scores. Likewise, other-oriented perfectionism had independent positive relationships with narcissistic superiority and achievement-oriented parental psychological control, after controlling for self-oriented and socially prescribed perfectionism. Overall, our findings provide preliminary support for the use of the OOPjr as a measure of other-oriented perfectionism in youths. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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