The application of the Conners' Rating Scales to a Sudanese sample: an analysis of parents' and teachers' ratings of childhood behaviour problems.
Author: Al Awad AM, Sonuga Barke EJ.
Source:
Psychology and Psychotherapy: Theory, Research and Practice, 75(2), 177-187.
The aim of the current study was to assess the equivalence of Sudanese and North
American versions of the Conners' Rating Scales. The reliability, internal
consistency, factor score intercorrelation, levels of sex differences and
prevalence of symptoms found with Sudanese Arabic adaptations of the parent and
teacher scales were compared with previously reported data from North American
studies. The scales were translated into Sudanese Arabic, backtranslated and
piloted among teachers and parents. These scales were administered to parents and
teachers from a stratified normative sample of 300 families with children between
6 and 10 years of age. Both versions of the questionnaire displayed high levels
of reliability and satisfactory internal consistency. The associations of ratings
by Sudanese adults differed from those typically seen in North American samples
in a number of ways. There was little evidence of the existence of broadband
distinctions between internalizing and externalizing problems, practically no sex
differences, only nonspecific associations between parent and teacher ratings
and, most strikingly, very low levels of behaviour problems reported. The results
provide evidence of the potential utility of the Sudanese versions of the
Conners' Rating Scales while raising important questions about cultural
differences in the structure and associations of behaviour problems and the
appropriateness of applying North American norms to other cultural groups. Future
research should look to supplement studies using adaptations of scales developed
in Western settings with more open-ended questions about problems of specific
significance to Sudanese parents.