Methods and Assessment in Culture and Psychology

Methods and Assessment in Culture and Psychology

Methods and Assessment in Culture and Psychology

Methods and Assessment in Culture and Psychology

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Overview

Significant advancements in methodologies and statistical techniques in cross-cultural psychological research abound, but general practice, education, and most researchers in psychology rarely use them. This leads to misinterpretations, misrepresentations, and prejudice. The authors expertly demonstrate the importance of methodological rigor to safeguard appropriate inferences about similarities and differences, particularly when methods have not been developed in the cultural contexts where they are used. The book features acculturation and identity, including contributions on remote acculturation, religiosity, and organizational contexts. It also covers individual differences and evaluates methodological progress in educational assessment, emotions, motivation, and personality. Methodological and psychometric perspectives on equivalence and bias, as well as measurement invariance in cross-cultural research, are a central theme. From study design to data interpretation, it is essential for psychology, and the social sciences in general, to adopt methods and assessment procedures that are more rigorous for culture-comparative studies.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781108476621
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 02/18/2021
Series: Culture and Psychology
Pages: 400
Product dimensions: 5.98(w) x 9.02(h) x 0.87(d)

About the Author

Michael Bender is an assistant professor at Tilburg University, the Netherlands, and an honorary associate professor at Gratia Christian College, Hong Kong. He is the incoming editor of Online Readings in Psychology and Culture (ORPC), the open-access journal of the International Association for Cross-Cultural Psychology (IACCP), and a board member on the committee for Cultural Diversity in the Netherlands Institute of Psychologists (NIP). He works on acculturation, identity, memory, and motivation.

Byron Adams is an assistant professor at Tilburg University, the Netherlands, visiting professor at Ghent University, Belgium, and senior research associate at the University of Johannesburg, South Africa. He served on the governing council for the Society for the Study of Emerging Adulthood (SSEA) and the Committee for Cultural Diversity in the Netherlands Institute of Psychologists (NIP). His research focuses on identity, inclusion, and well-being across cultures and lifespans.

Table of Contents

Part I. Introduction to Methods and Assessment in Culture and Psychology Michael Bender and Byron G. Adam; 1. Acculturation and Identity; Part II. Three Generations of Psychological Acculturation Research: Theoretical Advancements and Methodological Challenges David L. Sam and Colleen Ward; Part III. A Road Map for Integrating Religiosity to Acculturation Research Derya Güngör and Karen Phalet; Part IV. Identity in Remote Acculturation: Developments in Research and Methodology Byron G. Adams, Cagla Giray, Gail M. Ferguson; Part V. Acculturation and Diversity Management at Work: The Case of Multicultural South Africa Leon T. B. Jackson, Byron G. Adams, and Michael Bender; 2. Individual Differences across Cultures; Part VI. Broadening the Bases of Methodological Rigor in Cross-Cultural Educational Assessment Jia He, Isabel Benítez, and Kutlay Yagmur; Part VII. Individuals, Groups, and Classrooms Conceptual and Methodological Considerations on Studying Approaches to Cultural Diversity in Schools Maja Katharina Schachner, Miriam Schwarzenthal, Peter Noack; Part VIII. Emotion between Universalism and Relativism: Finding a Standard for Comparison in Cross-Cultural Emotion Research Johnny R. J. Fontaine and Seger M. Breugelmans; Part IX. Culture is More than Self-Reported Motives, Beliefs, and Values-Methodological Advancements of Measuring Implicit Motives across Cultural Contexts Athanasios Chasiotis, Jan Hofer, and Michael Bender; Part X. Development of the South African Personality Inventory: A Cross-Cultural Design in a Non-Western Society – Lessons Learned and Generalizability to Other Parts of the World Deon Meiring, J. Alewyn Nel, Velichko H. Fetvadjiev, and Carin Hill; Part XI. Combining Global and Local Approaches in Psycholexical Studies: Glocal Illustrations from Studies on Arabic Pia Zeinoun and Lina Daouk-Öyry; 3. Culture and Assessment; Part XII. Psychological Assessment In and Over Time: Challenges of Assessing Psychological Constructs and Processes in Cultural Dynamics Yoshihisa Kashima; Part XIII. Priming Culture(s): How Theories and Methods Inspire Each Other Chi-yue Chiu; Part XIV. The Evolution of Multigroup Comparison Testing across Culture: Past, Present, and Future Perspectives Barbara M. Byrne and David Matsumoto; Part XV. How Far Can Measurement Be Culture-Free? Ronald Fischer and Peter B. Smith.
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