Abstract

The effect of cyberbullying among adolescents in Malaysia is not much studied. The Cyberbullying Scale (CBS) has been validated to be used among English speaking adolescents to measure cyberbullying but not in Malay language. Therefore, its validity should be established before use in the Malaysian context. Thus, the study aimed to evaluate the validity and reliability of the Malay version of the CBS (CBS-M) among secondary school students. The study was cross-sectional and involved a self-administered questionnaire with 16 items from CBS-M, and 21 items from the Depression, Anxiety, and Stress Scale (DASS-21). Participants were recruited using a multi-stage sampling method. The validity of the CBS-M was tested in two phases, namely, exploratory factor analysis (EFA) and confirmatory factor analysis (CFA). Spearman’s correlation was used to examine the strength of the relationship between the CBS and subscales from DASS-21 to further support the validity of CBS-M. A total of 401 respondents from Muar, Johor, participated. The mean age was 14.6 years (SD = 1.25). EFA results indicated a one-factor model of CBS-M with a total variance extracted of 33.9%. Internal consistency measured by Cronbach’s alpha reached 0.87. The model was then tested using CFA. The initial model did not fit the data well. Thus, several model re-specifications were conducted on the initial model. The final measurement model of CBS-M fit the data well with acceptable fit indices (CFI = 0.946, TLI = 0.932, SRMR = 0.055, RMSEA = 0.049). The composite reliability for CBS-M was satisfactory with a value of 0.832. The CBS-M questionnaire is a valid and reliable tool for measuring cyberbullying among young adolescents in Malaysia.

Highlights

  • Introduction published maps and institutional affilIn the modern era, the Internet is accessible to nearly everyone

  • Two experts with knowledge on questionnaire design and a clinical psychologist reviewed the Cyberbullying Scale (CBS)-M to ensure the content were culturally appropriate to the Malaysian population

  • Three other schools were selected for exploratory factor analysis (EFA) and confirmatory factor analysis (CFA)

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Summary

Materials and Methods

The study employed a cross-sectional study design. The study participants included secondary schools’ students around Muar, Johor, Malaysia who eligible and consented to join the study. The mean age of the exploratory factor analysis (EFA) participants was 14.7 (SD = 1.26) and that of confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) participants was.

Instruments
Questionnaire Translation
Procedure
Data Analysis
EFA and Internal Consistency
CFA and Composite Reliability
Correlation between Cyberbullying and DASS-21’s Factors
Discussion
Conclusions
Full Text
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