Abstract
The current study is a reliability generalization meta-analysis of the Short Grit Scale (Grit-S). A total of 95,440 participants were found across 66 studies with 117 internal consistency coefficients. We present the average Cronbach coefficient alpha (α) for the total Grit-S and subscales, Consistency of Interest and Perseverance of Effort. The results include total sample percentages for participant characteristics and setting types in which researchers used the Grit-S. The alpha range (α = .68 − .73) indicates the Grit-S and individual subscales are suitable for basic research use but not clinical decision making. Additionally, studies were inconsistent with statistically significant results with participants outside the United States, and reliability coefficients reduced among nonwhite participants. Researchers should further study the reliability of Grit-S among diverse participants.
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Notes on Contributors
Lauren Rocha, PhD, is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Psychology at Tennessee State University.
A. Stephen Lenz, PhD, LPC, NCC, is a Professor and Department Chair in the Department of Counseling, Health and Kinesiology at Texas A&M University-San Antonio.