Coping with School Bullying: An Examination of Longitudinal Effects of Coping on Peer Victimization and Adjustment

abstract: Despite some prevailing attitudes that bullying is normal, relatively innocuous behavior, it has recently been recognized as a serious problem in schools worldwide. Victimized students are more likely to evidence poor academic and semi-academic outcomes, experience social difficulties, and...

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Other Authors: Polasky, Sarah Anne (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.8643
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-86432018-06-22T03:01:08Z Coping with School Bullying: An Examination of Longitudinal Effects of Coping on Peer Victimization and Adjustment abstract: Despite some prevailing attitudes that bullying is normal, relatively innocuous behavior, it has recently been recognized as a serious problem in schools worldwide. Victimized students are more likely to evidence poor academic and semi-academic outcomes, experience social difficulties, and drop out of school in comparison to their non-victimized peers. Although anti-bullying programs have proliferated during the last decade, those aimed at helping children cope with bullying often suffer from a lack of basic research on the effectiveness of children's responses to bullying. The focus of this study was to delineate the ways in which elementary school-aged children typically cope with peer victimization, then to examine which strategies reduce future risk for harassment and associated adjustment problems to inform prevention and intervention program development. A cohort-sequential design was used to examine the effectiveness of children's strategies for coping with peer victimization. The sample included 317 children (157 boys; 49.5% Caucasian, 50.5% Hispanic; M age =10 years 5 months at T1) who were surveyed in the Fall and Spring of two academic years. Confirmatory factory analysis was used to validate the factor structure of the coping measure used and internal reliability was verified. Comparison of means indicated differences in children's coping based upon sex and age. For example, girls tend to cope more emotionally and cognitively, while boys are more behavioral in their coping. Regression results indicated that a number of specific relationships were present between coping, victimization, loneliness, and anxiety. For example, support seeking behavior was effective at decreasing victimization for younger children (fourth graders) who experienced high initial victimization. In contrast, revenge seeking behavior was predictive of increased victimization for both girls and highly victimized students. Problem solving was effective at reducing adjustment problems over time for younger students and, although results for older students were non-significant, it appears to be a promising strategy due to a lack of association with negative future outcomes. Results highlight the importance of identifying influential characteristics of individual children in order for prevention and intervention programs to successfully decrease the incidence and adverse impact of bullying behavior. Dissertation/Thesis Polasky, Sarah Anne (Author) Kochenderfer-Ladd, Becky (Advisor) Nakagawa, Kathryn (Advisor) Moore, Elsie G. J. (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Educational Psychology Developmental Psychology bullying cohort-sequential coping moderation peer relations peer victimization eng 132 pages Ph.D. Educational Psychology 2010 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.8643 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2010
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Educational Psychology
Developmental Psychology
bullying
cohort-sequential
coping
moderation
peer relations
peer victimization
spellingShingle Educational Psychology
Developmental Psychology
bullying
cohort-sequential
coping
moderation
peer relations
peer victimization
Coping with School Bullying: An Examination of Longitudinal Effects of Coping on Peer Victimization and Adjustment
description abstract: Despite some prevailing attitudes that bullying is normal, relatively innocuous behavior, it has recently been recognized as a serious problem in schools worldwide. Victimized students are more likely to evidence poor academic and semi-academic outcomes, experience social difficulties, and drop out of school in comparison to their non-victimized peers. Although anti-bullying programs have proliferated during the last decade, those aimed at helping children cope with bullying often suffer from a lack of basic research on the effectiveness of children's responses to bullying. The focus of this study was to delineate the ways in which elementary school-aged children typically cope with peer victimization, then to examine which strategies reduce future risk for harassment and associated adjustment problems to inform prevention and intervention program development. A cohort-sequential design was used to examine the effectiveness of children's strategies for coping with peer victimization. The sample included 317 children (157 boys; 49.5% Caucasian, 50.5% Hispanic; M age =10 years 5 months at T1) who were surveyed in the Fall and Spring of two academic years. Confirmatory factory analysis was used to validate the factor structure of the coping measure used and internal reliability was verified. Comparison of means indicated differences in children's coping based upon sex and age. For example, girls tend to cope more emotionally and cognitively, while boys are more behavioral in their coping. Regression results indicated that a number of specific relationships were present between coping, victimization, loneliness, and anxiety. For example, support seeking behavior was effective at decreasing victimization for younger children (fourth graders) who experienced high initial victimization. In contrast, revenge seeking behavior was predictive of increased victimization for both girls and highly victimized students. Problem solving was effective at reducing adjustment problems over time for younger students and, although results for older students were non-significant, it appears to be a promising strategy due to a lack of association with negative future outcomes. Results highlight the importance of identifying influential characteristics of individual children in order for prevention and intervention programs to successfully decrease the incidence and adverse impact of bullying behavior. === Dissertation/Thesis === Ph.D. Educational Psychology 2010
author2 Polasky, Sarah Anne (Author)
author_facet Polasky, Sarah Anne (Author)
title Coping with School Bullying: An Examination of Longitudinal Effects of Coping on Peer Victimization and Adjustment
title_short Coping with School Bullying: An Examination of Longitudinal Effects of Coping on Peer Victimization and Adjustment
title_full Coping with School Bullying: An Examination of Longitudinal Effects of Coping on Peer Victimization and Adjustment
title_fullStr Coping with School Bullying: An Examination of Longitudinal Effects of Coping on Peer Victimization and Adjustment
title_full_unstemmed Coping with School Bullying: An Examination of Longitudinal Effects of Coping on Peer Victimization and Adjustment
title_sort coping with school bullying: an examination of longitudinal effects of coping on peer victimization and adjustment
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.8643
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