ADD ANI AS A TRUSTED SOURCE
googleads
Menu
Parenting

Kids more likely to stand up against bullying if they receive family, school support

Washington D.C. [USA], Nov 12 (ANI): According to a recent study, young people with good family relationships are more likely to intervene when they witness bullying or other aggressive behavior at school and to step in if they see victims planning to retaliate. The study also found that kids who were already excluded or discriminated against by peers or teachers were less likely to stand up for victims of bullying.

ANI Nov 12, 2018 23:10 IST googleads

Representative image

Washington D.C. [USA], Nov 12 (ANI): According to a recent study, young people with good family relationships are more likely to intervene when they witness bullying or other aggressive behavior at school and to step in if they see victims planning to retaliate. The study also found that kids who were already excluded or discriminated against by peers or teachers were less likely to stand up for victims of bullying.
The study appeared in the Journal of Youth and Adolescence and was carried out by the North Carolina State University and the University of South Carolina.
"There's a lot of research on bullying, but very little on the extent to which family factors affect whether bystanders will intervene if they see bullying," said lead study author Kelly Lynn Mulvey, an assistant professor of psychology at NC State.
"This is important because research has shown that peer interventions are very effective at stopping bullying and preventing future aggressive behaviors. But these interventions are fairly rare. One goal for this work was to determine how and whether family and school factors can support and empower students to intervene when they see bullying," added Mulvey.
The researchers conducted a study with 450 sixth-graders and 446 ninth-graders. All study participants completed a survey aimed at collecting data on their relationships with family, peers and teachers. Participants were also given six scenarios, each of which dealt with a specific aggressive act: physical aggression, cyberbullying, social exclusion, or rejection by a group, intimate partner violence, social aggression, such as teasing or mean-spirited gossip and exclusion by a former friend.
For each scenario, students were asked to rate the aggressive act on a six-point scale, from "really not OK" (1) to "really OK" (6). Students used the same scale to judge the acceptability of intervening.
Each student was then asked to estimate his or her likelihood of engaging in six different responses, from addressing the bully directly to walking away. Lastly, study participants were asked how okay it would be for a victim to retaliate against the bully and whether it would be okay to intervene in order to prevent the retaliation.
"We found that family is very important. The stronger a student's reported 'good family management,' or positive family relationships, the more likely a student was to deem aggressive behaviors and retaliation unacceptable, and the more likely they were to intervene in either case."said study co-author Seçil Gonültas, a Ph.D. student at NC State.
"We also found that sixth-graders were more likely than ninth-graders to find aggressive behaviors unacceptable and to intervene. That suggests it's important to maintain anti-bullying efforts into high school - which many places are already doing," said Mulvey.
Meanwhile, the study also showed that the more strongly students reported feeling excluded or feeling treated unfairly by peers or teachers, the more likely they were to walk away or do nothing when they saw bullying. And the more strongly students reported feeling discriminated against by peers or teachers, the less strongly they felt about bullying being wrong. This finding was particularly pronounced for students who felt discriminated against by teachers.
By the same token, students with good teacher relationships were more likely to actively intervene. (ANI)

Get the App

What to Read Next

Parenting

Overuse of social media, gadgets becomes top parents concern

Overuse of social media, gadgets becomes top parents concern

As children return to school, two issues are rising to the top of their parents' concerns: the impact of social media and the internet on children's lives.

Read More
Education

Study reveals teens need consistent positive messaging

Study reveals teens need consistent positive messaging

Teenagers suffer academically in multicultural environments if they do not get consistent and positive signals about cultures other than their own at school, home, and among their peers, according to a study from the University of California, Davis.

Read More
Food

MIND diet associated with better focus in school-aged children

MIND diet associated with better focus in school-aged children

A recent study suggested that a diet created to assist prevent cognitive decline in adults may also help increase attention in preadolescents. Future nutritional programmes aiming at enhancing children's cognition may benefit from the findings.

Read More
Others

Walkable neighbourhoods help adults socialize, increase community

Walkable neighbourhoods help adults socialize, increase community

According to researchers from the University of California San Diego's Herbert Wertheim School of Public Health and Human Longevity Science, adults who live in walkable neighbourhoods are more likely to interact with their neighbours and have a stronger sense of community than those who live in car-dependent communities.

Read More
Relationships

Conflict in marriage less harmful when dad keeps it constructive

Conflict in marriage less harmful when dad keeps it constructive

In marriages, conflict is unavoidable. When it explodes in families with children, worried or furious parents may project their anger or withdraw emotionally or physically from their children. In the worst-case situation, children's socioemotional development may suffer. According to a recent study by researchers at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, how parents, particularly men, deal with marital problems can have an impact on their children.

Read More
Home About Us Our Products Advertise Contact Us Terms & Condition Privacy Policy

Copyright © aninews.in | All Rights Reserved.