Development and Validity of the Fear of Water Assessment Questionnaire

Fear of water is the strongest predictor for no or low swimming competencies. Some individuals will never learn to swim due to their complete avoidance of water, whereas others might have difficulty with learning due to the fact that they cannot sufficiently relax their body to facilitate floating o...

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Main Authors: Fatmir Misimi, Tanja Kajtna, Samir Misimi, Jernej Kapus
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-05-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.00969/full
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spelling doaj-53e8078d1a7d476889a19a4a153f539f2020-11-25T03:18:10ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782020-05-011110.3389/fpsyg.2020.00969544772Development and Validity of the Fear of Water Assessment QuestionnaireFatmir MisimiTanja KajtnaSamir MisimiJernej KapusFear of water is the strongest predictor for no or low swimming competencies. Some individuals will never learn to swim due to their complete avoidance of water, whereas others might have difficulty with learning due to the fact that they cannot sufficiently relax their body to facilitate floating or swimming. Therefore, it is important to identify these people and to establish effective teaching strategies that can best help this specific population. Recognizing this, there is a clear need for an assessment tool which can help swim teachers and coaches identify people with a fear of water. The study aimed to first develop and then validate a fear of water assessment questionnaire (FWAQ). 2074 male and female people participated in the creation of a 40-item questionnaire. The exploratory factor showed that a 3 factor solution including 20 items was most sensible – such a solution accounted for 31.69% of explained variance and the Cronbach’s alpha α was 0.831, which makes for a reliable enough solution. A subsequent discriminant function analysis correctly classified 98.2% of participants. We concluded that the findings from this study support that the FWAQ is a valid scale that effectively identify people with fear of water.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.00969/fullswimming assessmentcoachingdrowningtestingswimming
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fatmir Misimi
Tanja Kajtna
Samir Misimi
Jernej Kapus
spellingShingle Fatmir Misimi
Tanja Kajtna
Samir Misimi
Jernej Kapus
Development and Validity of the Fear of Water Assessment Questionnaire
Frontiers in Psychology
swimming assessment
coaching
drowning
testing
swimming
author_facet Fatmir Misimi
Tanja Kajtna
Samir Misimi
Jernej Kapus
author_sort Fatmir Misimi
title Development and Validity of the Fear of Water Assessment Questionnaire
title_short Development and Validity of the Fear of Water Assessment Questionnaire
title_full Development and Validity of the Fear of Water Assessment Questionnaire
title_fullStr Development and Validity of the Fear of Water Assessment Questionnaire
title_full_unstemmed Development and Validity of the Fear of Water Assessment Questionnaire
title_sort development and validity of the fear of water assessment questionnaire
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2020-05-01
description Fear of water is the strongest predictor for no or low swimming competencies. Some individuals will never learn to swim due to their complete avoidance of water, whereas others might have difficulty with learning due to the fact that they cannot sufficiently relax their body to facilitate floating or swimming. Therefore, it is important to identify these people and to establish effective teaching strategies that can best help this specific population. Recognizing this, there is a clear need for an assessment tool which can help swim teachers and coaches identify people with a fear of water. The study aimed to first develop and then validate a fear of water assessment questionnaire (FWAQ). 2074 male and female people participated in the creation of a 40-item questionnaire. The exploratory factor showed that a 3 factor solution including 20 items was most sensible – such a solution accounted for 31.69% of explained variance and the Cronbach’s alpha α was 0.831, which makes for a reliable enough solution. A subsequent discriminant function analysis correctly classified 98.2% of participants. We concluded that the findings from this study support that the FWAQ is a valid scale that effectively identify people with fear of water.
topic swimming assessment
coaching
drowning
testing
swimming
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.00969/full
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