Psychometric Instruments Review and Usage Adaptation among Nigerian Study Populations in WorkFamily Conflict Studies: Case Study of the University of Benin, Benin City, Nigeria

Authors

  • John Omonzokpea OKOJIE University of Benin, Benin City, Nigeria

Keywords:

: Job Demands Sub-Scale, Time Management Behaviour Scale, Social Support Scale, Psychological Empowerment Scale, Psychometric Instruments.

Abstract

The purpose of this paper is to review some Psychometric instruments 
commonly utilised in the Work-Family Conflict Studies and to adopt them for 
use among the Nigerian study populations. Broadly speaking, the majority of 
the Psychometric instruments used in conducting research in Africa vis-a-viz, 
Nigeria are alien and foreign to these researchers. In order to have to be 
validated to suit local use, this is the gap, vacuum and loophole that this study 
seeks to fill. Validity and reliability analyses of these Psychometric instruments 
for use among the Nigerian populations were determined by administering the 
questionnaires on a sample of 100 participants randomly selected from 375 
staff of the University of Benin, Benin City South-South Nigeria and whose 
results were not included in the main study. Validity and reliability analyses 
were evaluated with the Cronbach alpha coefficient by utilising the IBM 
statistical package for the social scientists (IBM SPSS) version 22 for windows 
with an alpha correlation coefficient of between 0.71 and 0.86 the results 
showed that the Psychometric instruments were valid and reliable for Nigerian 
study populations. The study recommends that more studies of this nature 
should be undertaken by Work-Family Conflict Researchers. 

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Published

2020-09-09