Chinese Journal of Society ›› 2016, Vol. 2 ›› Issue (4): 609-635.doi: 10.1177/2057150X16672813

Previous Articles    

Evaluating the measurement reliabilities and dimensionality of developmental idealism measures

Arland Thornton1, Georgina Binstock2, Linda Young-DeMarco1, Colter Mitchell1, Kathryn M. Yount3 and Yu Xie4,5   

  1. 1 Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA 2 CONICET and Centro de Estudios de Población (CENEP), Buenos Aires, Argentina 3 Hubert Department of Global Health and Department of Sociology, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA 4 Center for Social Research, Peking University, Beijing, China 5 Center on Contemporary China, Princeton University, NJ, USA
  • Online:2016-10-01 Published:2016-10-01
  • Contact: Arland Thornton, Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48104, USA. Email: arlandt@umich.edu

Abstract:

This paper investigates the measurement of developmental idealism. Developmental idealism is a set of beliefs and values stating that modern societies and families are better than traditional societies and families, that modern families facilitate modern societies, and that modern societies foster modern families. Prior research has shown that developmental idealism is widespread globally but has provided little evidence about whether beliefs concerning developmental idealism can be measured reliably at the individual level. It also has provided little information about the dimensionality and psychometric properties of measures of developmental idealism. Using cross-sectional survey data from Argentina, China, and Egypt, we explore and test the factor structure underlying observed measures for aspects of developmental idealism and estimate the reliability of different models. Theory and data suggest that developmental idealism consists of multiple dimensions, and when family-related items are measuring similar underlying constructs, the measurement reliabilities are high. These results provide evidence that the dimensions of developmental idealism can be measured with a high degree of reliability.

Key words: Developmental idealism, conceptualization, measurement reliability