Tarshis Thomas P, Huffman Lynne C
Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, USA.
J Dev Behav Pediatr. 2007 Apr;28(2):125-32. doi: 10.1097/01.DBP.0000267562.11329.8f.
Recently, national and international scientific and popular press has focused on bullying and victimization. Unfortunately, many interventions that address bullying and victimization are yet to be empirically validated. One problem is the lack of a psychometrically sound instrument for the measurement of bullying and victimization.
To alleviate this shortcoming, the Peer Interactions in Primary School Questionnaire (PIPS) was developed and tested. Twenty-two questions designed to capture direct and indirect forms of bullying and victimization were created at a third-grade reading level. Psychometric data were collected from administration of the questionnaire to 270 students in third through sixth grades at three different elementary schools. An exploratory factor analysis yielded two factors (bullying and victimization).
Internal consistency for the questionnaire was high (Cronbach's alpha = .90). Intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs) and Spearman's rho established that test-retest reliability was high for both scales: bullying (ICC = .84; rho = .76) and victimization (ICC = .88; rho = .87). Significant Kruskal-Wallis tests of relationships between PIPS scales and items on the Olweus Bullying/Victimization Questionnaire and the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire supported concurrent validity. Bullying and victimization were widespread, as 89.5% of children experienced some form of victimization and 59.0% of students participated in some form of bullying.
With these data, the PIPS is the first self-report bullying and victimization measure designed for elementary school use determined reliable (internally consistent and reproducible) and valid. The PIPS is a tool that could be used in the design and evaluation of school-based bullying/victimization interventions.
最近,国内外科学及大众媒体都聚焦于欺凌与受欺负现象。遗憾的是,许多针对欺凌与受欺负现象的干预措施尚未得到实证验证。其中一个问题是缺乏一种心理测量学上可靠的工具来衡量欺凌与受欺负现象。
为弥补这一不足,我们开发并测试了小学同伴互动问卷(PIPS)。我们编写了22个问题,旨在捕捉欺凌与受欺负的直接和间接形式,这些问题的阅读水平设定为三年级。我们从三所不同小学的270名三至六年级学生中收集了问卷的心理测量数据。探索性因素分析得出了两个因素(欺凌和受欺负)。
该问卷的内部一致性较高(克朗巴哈系数α = 0.90)。组内相关系数(ICC)和斯皮尔曼等级相关系数确定了两个量表的重测信度都很高:欺凌(ICC = 0.84;rho = 0.76)和受欺负(ICC = 0.88;rho = 0.87)。PIPS量表与奥维斯欺凌/受欺负问卷及优势与困难问卷上的项目之间关系的显著克鲁斯卡尔 - 沃利斯检验支持了同时效度。欺凌和受欺负现象很普遍,因为89.5%的儿童经历过某种形式的受欺负,59.0%的学生参与过某种形式的欺凌。
基于这些数据,PIPS是首个为小学设计的、经确定可靠(内部一致且可重复)且有效的自我报告欺凌与受欺负测量工具。PIPS是一种可用于设计和评估基于学校的欺凌/受欺负干预措施的工具。