INFORMATION SECURITY AWARENESS SCALE (ISAS) FOR UNIVERSITY STUDENTS: A VALIDITY AND RELIABILITY STUDY

The purpose of this study is to develop a scale for university students to determine information security awareness levels. The categories and the indicators related to information security awareness were determined by the literature review. A question pool of 90-items related to the categories and...

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Autor principal: Can GÜLDÜREN
Formato: article
Lenguaje:DE
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FR
TR
Publicado: Fırat University 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/1cfda77b721a43fdbba3a487576c2e35
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Sumario:The purpose of this study is to develop a scale for university students to determine information security awareness levels. The categories and the indicators related to information security awareness were determined by the literature review. A question pool of 90-items related to the categories and the indicators was generated. Next, 23 field experts evaluated the draft scale form for the content validity. After that, the 67-point scale, which was redesigned in line with expert assessments, was practiced to the students studying at Ankara University. As a result of exploratory factor analysis, it was determined that the scale consists of 34 items and 4 subscales ('privacy and safe browsing', 'attacks and threats', ‘general security’ and ‘cyberbulling’).A confirmatory factor analysis with the data of the second group of 156 participants was performed at the following stage of the study, and the structure with four factors was confirmed. At the end of the construct validity analysis, the scale consists of four factors and 34 items, and the total variance that it can explain is 50,42%. The Cronbach Alpha internal consistency coefficient and the Spearman-Brown split-half reliability coefficient were calculated to confirm the reliability of the scale. Besides, the significance of the differences between the upper and lower 27 % group item averages was examined using the corrected item-total correlation and t-test. The Cronbach alpha internal consistency coefficient was 0.949 and the Spearman-Brown split half reliability coefficient was 0.861 for the whole scale, while it was calculated as PSB: 0.927/0.833, AT: 0.923/0.871, GS: 0.821/0.801, and CS: 0.898/0.887 for the sub-scales, respectively. All findings show that a high reliability and validity scale that can be used to determine the levels of information security awareness of university students was obtained.