Development and Validation of the State Hope Scale

by C. Rick Snyder, Susie C. Sympson, Florence C. Ybasco, Tyrone F. Borders, Michael A. Babyak, and Raymond L. Higgins

Journal of Personality and Social Psychology (Volume 70, Issue 2, pp. 321–335) 1996
  • Psychology

Defining hope as a cognitive set compromising agency (belief in one’s capacity to initiate and sustain actions) and pathways (belief in one’s capacity to generate routes) to reach goals, the Hope Scale was developed and validated previously as a dispositional self- report measure of hope (Snyder et al., 1991). The present four studies were designed to develop and validate a measure of state hope. The six-item State Hope Scale is internally consistent and reflects the theorized agency and pathways components. The relationships of the State Hope Scale to other measures demonstrate concurrent and discriminant validity; moreover, the scale is responsive to events in the lives of people as evidenced by data gathered through both correlational and causal designs. The State Hope Scale offers a brief, internally consistent, and valid self-report measure of ongoing goal-directed thinking that may be useful to researchers and applied professionals.