Volunteer Functions Inventory: A systematic review
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How to Cite

Chacón, F., Gutiérrez, G., Sauto, V., Vecina, M. L., & Pérez, A. (2018). Volunteer Functions Inventory: A systematic review. Psicothema, 29(Número 3), 306–316. Retrieved from https://reunido.uniovi.es/index.php/PST/article/view/16821

Abstract

The objective of this research study was to conduct a systematic review of the research on volunteers using Clary et al.’s VFI (1998). A total of 48 research studies including 67 independent samples met eligibility criteria. The total sample of the studies analyzed ranged from 20375 to 21988 participants, depending on the motivation analyzed. The results show that the Values factor obtained the highest mean score, both overall and in each type of volunteering, whereas the lowest scores were for the Career and Enhancement factors. Studies conducted with samples with a mean age under 40 years obtain higher scores on Career and Understanding scales when compared to studies in older samples. The group of studies with less than 50% women yield higher mean scores on the Social scale than studies with more than 50% women in the sample. All the scales show reliability coefficients between .78 and .84. Only eight of the articles provide data on the reliability of the scale with a mean value of .90. Of the 26 studies that performed factor analysis, 18 confirmed the original structure of six factors.
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