Attitudes to Animals and Bullying among Teenagers

Objective of the study is to test the hypothesis about the connection between bullying and animal violence. Background. Several studies explore the link between aggressive behaviors in children and cruelty to animals. One the most typical aggression behavior for the Russian adolescents is bullying....

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Main Author: Volkova I.V.
Format: Article
Language:Russian
Published: Moscow State University of Psychology and Education 2021-07-01
Series:Социальная психология и общество
Subjects:
Online Access:https://psyjournals.ru/en/social_psy/2021/n2/Volkova.shtml
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spelling doaj-98dfc27f48c24059905e3e654dc0d0c92021-07-09T09:54:33ZrusMoscow State University of Psychology and EducationСоциальная психология и общество2221-15272311-70522021-07-0112218319610.17759/sps.2021120211Attitudes to Animals and Bullying among TeenagersVolkova I.V.0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3531-7257Russian Academy of Education, Moscow, RussiaObjective of the study is to test the hypothesis about the connection between bullying and animal violence. Background. Several studies explore the link between aggressive behaviors in children and cruelty to animals. One the most typical aggression behavior for the Russian adolescents is bullying. The article seeks to understand if a cruelty to animals a significant predictor of bullying roles (victim, bully, witness). Study design. The study was conducted using a socio-psychological survey. Cruelty to animals was assessed with Cruelty to Animals Inventory, attitudes to animals were measured with Pet Attitudes Scale. Prevalence of bullying was estimated with Olweus Bully/Victim Questionnaire. Participants. The study included two samples. The first sample included 69 respondents (average age 13,7 years; 55% of males). The second — 96 respondents (average age 14,01 years; 74% of males). Methods. For data processing, mean comparisons (t-test, Wilcoxon test), chi-square test and regression analysis were applied in R 3.5.0 environment. Results. 44—53% of adolescents were cruel to animals at least once. 42% of adolescents were found to be victims of bullying, 20% — were bullies and 88% were witnesses. Girls were found to be bullies more frequently than boys. Cruelty to animals was a significant predictor only for the victim role, but not for bully or the witness role. Conclusions. Cruelty to animals can be an indicator of bullying in adolescence. https://psyjournals.ru/en/social_psy/2021/n2/Volkova.shtmlcruelty to animalsattitudes to animalsbullying
collection DOAJ
language Russian
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Volkova I.V.
spellingShingle Volkova I.V.
Attitudes to Animals and Bullying among Teenagers
Социальная психология и общество
cruelty to animals
attitudes to animals
bullying
author_facet Volkova I.V.
author_sort Volkova I.V.
title Attitudes to Animals and Bullying among Teenagers
title_short Attitudes to Animals and Bullying among Teenagers
title_full Attitudes to Animals and Bullying among Teenagers
title_fullStr Attitudes to Animals and Bullying among Teenagers
title_full_unstemmed Attitudes to Animals and Bullying among Teenagers
title_sort attitudes to animals and bullying among teenagers
publisher Moscow State University of Psychology and Education
series Социальная психология и общество
issn 2221-1527
2311-7052
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Objective of the study is to test the hypothesis about the connection between bullying and animal violence. Background. Several studies explore the link between aggressive behaviors in children and cruelty to animals. One the most typical aggression behavior for the Russian adolescents is bullying. The article seeks to understand if a cruelty to animals a significant predictor of bullying roles (victim, bully, witness). Study design. The study was conducted using a socio-psychological survey. Cruelty to animals was assessed with Cruelty to Animals Inventory, attitudes to animals were measured with Pet Attitudes Scale. Prevalence of bullying was estimated with Olweus Bully/Victim Questionnaire. Participants. The study included two samples. The first sample included 69 respondents (average age 13,7 years; 55% of males). The second — 96 respondents (average age 14,01 years; 74% of males). Methods. For data processing, mean comparisons (t-test, Wilcoxon test), chi-square test and regression analysis were applied in R 3.5.0 environment. Results. 44—53% of adolescents were cruel to animals at least once. 42% of adolescents were found to be victims of bullying, 20% — were bullies and 88% were witnesses. Girls were found to be bullies more frequently than boys. Cruelty to animals was a significant predictor only for the victim role, but not for bully or the witness role. Conclusions. Cruelty to animals can be an indicator of bullying in adolescence.
topic cruelty to animals
attitudes to animals
bullying
url https://psyjournals.ru/en/social_psy/2021/n2/Volkova.shtml
work_keys_str_mv AT volkovaiv attitudestoanimalsandbullyingamongteenagers
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