ABSTRACT
This study presents initial evidence supporting the language adaptation of a brief measure of youths’ internalizing problems—the Youth Internalizing Problems Screener (YIPS)—for use with Turkish adolescents within the context of school mental health screening. Results showed that responses to the Turkish version of the YIPS were characterized by a psychometrically sound, single-factor measurement model, and that scores derived from this measure were moderately negatively associated with scores from several school-specific and domain-general well-being measures. Overall, results suggest that responses to the Turkish version of the YIPS may be useful in schools to identify youth with elevated levels of internalizing problems and concurrently poor quality-of-life outcomes, providing a warrant for school-based intervention. Yet further research is needed to probe the direct utility of this measure for classification and treatment purposes in schools.
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Gökmen Arslan
Gökmen Arslan, PhD, works at Hope Psychology: Counseling and Development Center in Turkey. His research interests are centered on measuring and improving youths’ psychological functioning in school settings.
Tyler L. Renshaw
Tyler L. Renshaw, PhD, is an Assistant Professor in the School Psychology Program within the Department of Psychology at Utah State University. His research interests are broadly focused on developing and validating measure- ment and intervention methods for promoting youths’ well- being and mental health in schools.