# Design and psychometric evaluation of RES-PRIM: a resilience scale for primary education students with and without neurodevelopmental disorders

**Authors:** Raquel Flores-Buils, Clara Andrés-Roqueta, Rosa Mateu-Pérez

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2025.1663460 · Frontiers in Psychiatry · 2025-10-08

## TL;DR

This paper introduces RES-PRIM, a new resilience scale for children aged 6-12, including those with neurodevelopmental disorders, designed to measure both personal strengths and environmental supports.

## Contribution

RES-PRIM is the first inclusive, visually supported resilience scale for primary students with and without neurodevelopmental disorders.

## Key findings

- Confirmatory factor analysis showed a strong two-level structure with excellent fit indices.
- The scale demonstrated satisfactory reliability with Cronbach’s alpha and McDonald’s omega ranging from .70 to .88.
- Higher resilience scores correlated with better emotional regulation and lower academic stress.

## Abstract

Promoting resilience is a proven pathway to well-being, participation, and quality of life in childhood; it is particularly critical for learners with neurodevelopmental disorders (NDD), who encounter layered academic and socio-emotional challenges. Yet existing resilience measures rarely target the 6- to 12-year age band and none offer the inclusive, visually supported format required by many neurodivergent pupils.

To design and provide evidence of validity and reliability for RES-PRIM, a child-friendly, picture-augmented scale that captures both individual strengths (e.g., self-esteem, problem-solving) and contextual supports (e.g., family, peer, and teacher backing) in children with and without NDD.

After an evidence-guided item-generation process rooted in universal-design principles, RES-PRIM was administered to 529 Spanish primary-school students (465 typically developing, 64 with NDD). Confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) was conducted to provide evidence of validity regarding internal structure, and reliability was examined for the overall scale and each factor using Cronbach’s alpha and McDonald’s omega. In addition, external measures of emotional regulation and academic stress were applied to analyze evidence of relations to external variables.

CFA supported a nine–first-order/two–second-order structure with excellent fit (χ²/df = 1.61, RMSEA= .038, SRMR= .045, CFI= .934, TLI= .922). Reliability was satisfactory for the total scale and all dimensions, with Cronbach’s alpha ranging from.70 to.87 and McDonald’s omega from.72 to.88. Evidence of relations to external variables emerged through the expected associations: higher resilience correlated with better emotion regulation and lower academic stress.

RES-PRIM provides researchers and practitioners with a robust, inclusive assessment tool that can (a) identify resilience profiles in diverse classrooms, and (b) guide evidence-based, multi-tiered interventions aimed at enhancing children’s quality of life and full participation.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** NDD (MESH:D002658)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

73 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12540412/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12540412