Methodological strategies for linking superordinate life goals (values) and daily activities: a cross-sectional online study of adolescents
Lawrence M. Scheier, William B. Hansen, Martin Komarc

TL;DR
This study explores how adolescents connect their life goals with daily activities using different psychometric methods.
Contribution
The study introduces four psychometric methods to rank activities aligned with adolescent life goals.
Findings
Four weighting methods showed consistent ranking of activities for six life goals.
Selected activities demonstrated uniformity across different psychometric approaches.
Adolescents' life goals are linked to specific daily activities through consistent ranking methods.
Abstract
Adolescents pursue life goals through daily activities that pave the way toward a future or ideal self. Very little is known, however, regarding what youth consider to be important activities in support of their life goals. In the present study, we examined four psychometric methods of weighting and rank ordering activities associated with six life goals (Fitness, Helpful, Smart, Talented, Creative, and Social). Cross-sectional data were obtained from an online survey of 2,001 youth ages 13 to 15 who picked a life goal and then rated whether 21 activities align with their life goal. Eleven of the activities for each goal were selected by ChatGPT and mixed with 10 filler activities (drawn from the remaining life goals). Four weighting methods including an ipsative distribution-based approach, confirmatory factor analysis, item response theory, and multidimensional scaling were used to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPsychological Well-being and Life Satisfaction · Motivation and Self-Concept in Sports · Youth Development and Social Support
