Abstract

Research on children’s quality of life and subjective well-being has advanced over the past decade largely as a result of developments in childhood theory, children’s rights legislation, and the shift toward positive social science. However, in line with the uncertainty regarding the conceptualization of subjective well-being, the structural configuration of children’s subjective well-being has not been considered in the literature. In the current study, we present and test a model of children’s subjective well-being, which includes global (context-free items assessing overall and general well-being, without reference to a specific aspect of life) and specific (domain-based items assessing a specific aspect of life) cognitive components, and positive and negative affect. We further test the fit structure of a hierarchical structural (second-order) model of children’s subjective well-being. Finally, we test the measurement invariance of the hierarchical model across age and gender. We use data from the third Wave of the Children’s Worlds Survey. The data source includes a sample of 92,782 participants selected from 35 countries (girls = 49.7%) in two age groups (10- and 12-years-old). We found a good fit for the four-factor confirmatory factor model of children’s subjective well-being. Correlations between the various latent factors were as anticipated—with positive correlations between the life satisfaction components and positive affect, and negative correlations with negative affect. We further found a good fit for the hierarchical structural model of children’s subjective well-being. Finally, we found the tenability of measurement invariance across age and gender. The study extends the generalizability of the hierarchical structural configuration of the subjective well-being to child samples, and provides a viable model to explore correlates and predictors of children’s subjective well-being using the full conceptual model. Finally, we propound the tenability of a quadripartite hierarchical conceptual model of children’s subjective well-being.

Highlights

  • The concept of subjective well-being (SWB) has its genesis in the Greek philosophical concepts of “hedonia.” Hedonic well-being focuses on life satisfaction, happiness, and SWB; it is often denoted as “feeling well,” representing the good life, and concretized as experiencing happiness (Huta and Ryan, 2010; Adler and Seligman, 2016)

  • The study further aimed to ascertain the fit structure of a hierarchical structural model of children’s SWB

  • We found a good fit for the four-factor confirmatory factor model of children’s SWB

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Summary

Introduction

The concept of subjective well-being (SWB) has its genesis in the Greek philosophical concepts of “hedonia.” Hedonic well-being focuses on life satisfaction, happiness, and SWB; it is often denoted as “feeling well,” representing the good life, and concretized as experiencing happiness (Huta and Ryan, 2010; Adler and Seligman, 2016). The cognitive component refers to global and domain-based life satisfaction, while the affective component refers to positive (PA) and negative affect (NA) (Diener et al, 1999). Galinha and Pais-Ribeiro (2009) found a good fit for a hierarchical model of SWB, which included global (contextfree) and specific (domain-based) levels of measurement of cognitive SWB and state level positive and negative affect. They further confirmed the stability of the SWB structure across a 2month replication period. While these debates are well-grounded as it relates to SWB in adults, there is less consideration in the literature on SWB in children

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