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The Development and Validation of the Motives to Donate Scale
Author(s) -
Sara Konrath,
Femida Handy
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
nonprofit and voluntary sector quarterly
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.098
H-Index - 84
eISSN - 1552-7395
pISSN - 0899-7640
DOI - 10.1177/0899764017744894
Subject(s) - psychology , confirmatory factor analysis , scale (ratio) , exploratory factor analysis , altruism (biology) , ethical egoism , social psychology , reliability (semiconductor) , sample (material) , construct validity , test (biology) , construct (python library) , personality , external validity , validity , psychometrics , structural equation modeling , clinical psychology , statistics , computer science , power (physics) , physics , chemistry , mathematics , paleontology , chromatography , quantum mechanics , biology , programming language
In this article, we develop and validate a comprehensive self-report scale of why people make charitable donations, relying on a theoretical model of private versus public benefits to donors. In Study 1, we administered an initial pool of 54 items to a general adult sample online. An exploratory factor analysis supported six final factors in the Motives to Donate scale: Trust, Altruism, Social, Tax benefits, Egoism, and Constraints. We then verified this factor structure in a confirmatory factor analysis. Study 1 also examined the final 18-item scale’s demographic correlates and construct validity using the same sample. We found that the scale correlated in predictable ways with personality traits and motives to volunteer. In Study 2, we also found test–retest correlations between .67 and .80 after 2 weeks. Taken together, we provide initial evidence for the scale’s internal reliability, test–retest reliability, and validity, and we suggest future directions for research.

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