Abstract
Psychological sense of community is defined as feelings of belongingness and a shared belief that community members will meet one another’s needs. Psychological sense of community has four dimensions: membership, influence, needs fulfillment, and emotional connection. In this study, multigroup confirmatory factor analysis was used to examine the first and second‐order factor structure of the brief sense of community scale (BSCS) between male and female Hispanic/Latinx adolescents from an urban community (N = 947). To help validate the BSCS model, the second‐order factor model was tested with regression to predict the measures of intrapersonal psychological empowerment and ethnic identity, as constructs conceptually related to psychological sense of community. Findings support that: (1) psychological sense of community can be measured through the BSCS and as a four‐factor model among Hispanic/Latinx youth, supporting McMillan and Chavis’s (1986) original theoretical discussions; (2) while no differences between genders were present at the model‐level, there was path‐specific variation; and (3) intrapersonal psychological empowerment and ethnic identity were associated with psychological sense of community.